Photography

How the magic of photography brought Victorian England closer to the spirit realm

How the magic of photography brought Victorian England closer to the spirit realm

Spiritualism is the belief that an unseen world of departed souls exists alongside our own and that, under the right circumstances, can be detected and even communicated with. Its no coincidence that spiritualism’s peak spanned from the 1840s to the 1920s, alongside the rise of a flurry of new communications technologies – including the telephone, telegraph, radio and photography – that connected people across previously unthinkable gaps in time and space.

In this video from the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the curators Ruth Hibbard and Lydia Caston use objects from the museum’s collection to explore how, in the UK, spiritualism took root not only in the minds of the bereaved and superstitious, but also in many who considered themselves serious-minded empiricists. With cameos from such famed British names as Arthur Conan Doyle, Charles Dickens, Lewis Carroll and even Queen Victoria herself, the short makes for an intriguing dive into the nexus of religion, technology and entertainment in the Victorian era.

Photographer Elizabeth Menzies Focus of New Exhibition at Princeton University

Photographer Elizabeth Menzies Focus of New Exhibition at Princeton University

In 1936, three years out of high school and working from her home darkroom on Prospect Avenue in Princeton, Elizabeth Menzies (1915-2003) sold her first cover photograph to the Princeton Alumni Weekly (PAW). That photo and many others went uncredited. The back sides of the prints document an evolution from the lightly penciled “Menzies” to a polite “Credit Line Appreciated” to her rubber stamp insisting “Credit Line, Please.”

A new exhibition of Menzies’ work, Credit Line, Please: Photographs by Elizabeth Menzies, is now open. Curated by Phoebe Nobles (Processing Archivist), Emma Paradies (Library Collections Specialist IV), and Rosalba Varallo Recchia (Library Collections Specialist VI) of Princeton University Library, the exhibition features dozens of photographs from the University Archives collections at Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, in particular the Princeton Alumni Weekly Photograph Collection and the Historical Photograph Collections.

Menzies was both an insider and outsider. While excluded from the education she documented, she enjoyed privileged access to campus through her father Alan Menzies, a chemistry professor, and her job at Princeton’s Index of Medieval Art. Her camera was her ticket to lecture halls where, in the words of one PAW editor, undergraduates “endured Betty Menzies’ tennis shoes silently padding through the back rows.”

Savoring the moments: The Tilly Project captures end-of-life pet photos

Savoring the moments: The Tilly Project captures end-of-life pet photos

There comes a point in every pet’s life when it’s time to say goodbye, but photographers around the world are making it possible for people to hold onto the memories of their loved one.


What You Need To Know

  • The Tilly Project provides families with photos of their pets as they reach old ages or get sick
  • Founded in Maine during the summer of 2021, the project has since grown worldwide
  • The Tilly Project has photographers located throughout New York, the United States and other countries

It’s a forever keepsake.

“Photographing a pet is kind of a form of closure for these families,” Ashley Carroll said.

She is a photographer for The Tilly Project, which is named after the creator’s cat, which passed away unexpectedly.

The goal of the project is to provide families with photos of their pets as they reach old ages or get sick.

Founded in Maine during the summer of 2021, the project has since grown worldwide.

“I absolutely love doing end-of-life pet photography. It’s kind of one of my favorite things to photograph,” Carroll said. “I know what these families are about to go through, and I just want to provide them with as much help as I can.”

Carroll works in veterinary medicine, so she meets many clients there but offers end-of-life pet photo sessions free of charge.

Her most recent one was with Mackenzie Lawrence, her son, Cason, and their 14-year-old dog, Max.

“I think that it’s a memory that you’re capturing, that it’s something that you’ll have for the rest of your life that you can hold on to, so it’s important,” Lawrence said.

Max here is one of more than 100 pets Carroll has photographed over the last three years.

“No family should go without these types of photos,” Carroll said.

Lawrence plans to hang the photos in her home and make an album for her son to appreciate when he’s older.  

“I think it’s so sentimental because we are always taking pictures with families and weddings and events, but dogs really are part of our family. So, I know for us, it’s important to capture those memories as well,” Lawrence said.

The Tilly Project has photographers located throughout New York, the United States and other countries. Click here to find one near you.

Someone You Should Know: Top agricultural photographer

Someone You Should Know: Top agricultural photographer

GARRETSON, S.D. (Dakota News Now) – Robb Long first started snapping photos while growing up in Richmond, Virginia.

“I started photography at the age of 14 and started shooting professionally at 16 for the Richmond Times Dispatch. And that love of photography came from just being curious and adventurous,” said Robb.

Eventually, Robb would leave the media to take a different kind of picture.

“What happened was there was a big shift in advertising photography, leading more toward authentic, real imagery. And being a photojournalist really set me up for success in that field,” said Robb.

A job at Sanford Health led him to this region. After moving to Garretson, where he now lives with his wife and three kids, the lens pointed to something new.

“We’re around all these farms and all that kind of stuff. I was curious about it. I remember probably back in 2014 or 2015, the creative director at Paulson called me up and said, ‘Hey, we really love your photography. Would you like to come out and shoot an agricultural campaign for Kubota tractors?’ And I was like, ‘What’s a Kubota tractor?’” said Robb.

Robb did that and has since become one of the top ag photographers in the world, with his work in a number of major publications.

“I absolutely just fell in love with it. I fell in love with the people of South Dakota, and I fell in love with the farming lifestyle — and then went out onto farms and just started shooting on my own personal projects. Guys in combines working the fields, seed companies, all that sort of stuff. 98 percent of my projects are all agriculture,” said Robb.

Now his business Robb Long Photo and Video takes him places.

“We’re a global production company. So we have photographed on pig farms in Europe, and we also photographed for Nutrena Animal Feeds out in California. I was just in North Dakota shooting a couple of campaigns up there,” said Robb.

He’s been featured in Archive Magazine’s top 200 ad photos worldwide, for three books in a row.

“Everyone seems to love the authenticity. And they like how I also put in a human element into the agricultural photography I do. I just don’t photograph the machines — I have people operate them, do a lot of lifestyle stuff around the machines. 90 percent of all of the ad campaigns I do, I will source a lot of the talent right from town here. They’ll see themselves on a billboard, and they’ll take a picture and send it to me. It’s really kind of exciting. It’s a lot of fun,” said Robb.

Meet the Texas Photog Going Viral for Her Impressive Polaroid Lift Skills

Meet the Texas Photog Going Viral for Her Impressive Polaroid Lift Skills

Meet the Texas Photographer Going Viral for Her Impressive Polaroid Lift Skills

Hannah Harbour’s video detailing her Polaroid lift process earned 19 million views on Instagram.

Polaroid lift by Hannah Harbour. Photo courtesy of the artist.

A photographer in Texas is going viral for her impressive Polaroid emulsion lift technique, earning kudos from fans for re-popularizing the process.

Using the age-old technique, Hannah Harbour, 31, makes surreal compositions by transferring multiple Polaroid images onto a single sheet of paper, and often experiments with processes like using watercolors over transfers of black-and-white Polaroids or adding gold leaf to her finished work.

“I’m amazed every time. Polaroid lifts never get old for me. I am in awe each time, as though I’ve never done it before,” Harbour said in the caption for one video which received 19 million views. “The results are never the same and that’s what I love.”

Harbour said in an emailed interview that she has been doing Polaroid transfers for about two years and learned the process through YouTube videos and reading articles, piecing together what she could find. The technique involves peeling away a Polaroid photo’s transparent top layer containing the image, then dunking it in water before lifting it onto another surface, usually watercolor paper.

“While I found a lot of information helpful, it really took doing it myself with trial and error to really refine the process,” she said, adding that there were small but important details missing from a lot of the guides online such as finding the optimal timing in the Polaroid’s development process when you can do a transfer because it’s a small window.

Polaroid lift showing a portrait of a woman in sunglasses holding a cigarette between her lips

Polaroid lift by Hannah Harbour. Photo courtesy of the artist.

In comments to Digital Camera World, Harbour further shared how she has been fascinated with Polaroid photographs her whole life and used to rifle through old family albums to look at the instant film pictures.

“There’s something about the instant, unpredictable nature of a polaroid that is so exciting!” she said. “Digital photography is great at capturing a moment of time, polaroid’s, however, capture the very feeling of a moment, the essence and soul of the subject in the shot; it’s magical, truly, nothing compares.”

She knew right away from her first Polaroid transfer that she wanted to document her journey with the medium and so recorded and shared a video of her very first one as a reel on Instagram. Sharing it online was her first experience with virality, which was a surprise to her. While it’s still online, she called it “an awful photo” and a “subpar transfer.”

“Since that first transfer, I have refined my skills tremendously and I now feel as though I truly understand the process,” she said. “It has been a truly humbling experience to see my work gain such a following and exposure. When you create from the heart and for the simple love of the art form, I feel you have already succeeded.”

Polaroid lift by Hannah Harbour showing three roses against a dark background

Polaroid lift by Hannah Harbour. Photo courtesy of the artist.

She thinks people have been drawn to her transfers particularly above some of her other photography because it deconstructs “such an ubiquitous medium,” adding that  “there may be a hint of ASMR in the relaxing nature of playing in pools of water.”

“The liquidity of the emulsion lift process and flowing nature of the photo as it twirls in the water felt like a natural canvas for other fluid-based mediums such as inks, dyes, and watercolors,” Harbour said when asked about her experimentation in blending Polaroid transfers with watercolor.

The photographer has detailed her processes in an illustrated 15-page guide available for purchase on her website, which she released a few months ago “as a way to give back” to the place she first learned the process—the internet. She has also given basic descriptions in her Instagram posts.

“I often pause throughout the process to appreciate the small details such as the way the emulsion dances around in the water,” she said in a post. “It’s truly one of my favorite creative outlets. I find it therapeutic and extremely satisfying.”

Polaroid lift by Hannah Harbour. Photo courtesy of the artist.

Beyond Polaroid, Harbour prefers shooting film with her Canon A1 but said that she has been recently shooting more digital photos with her Olympus OM-D E-M1, from which she said she will eventually upgrade.

She also uses the Polaroid Now+ camera, which always Bluetooth control useful for selfies—which are often the basis for her transfer prints. In one video, she showed off her Polaroid Lab device which is also useful for printing digitally shot pictures from a phone, and helps reduce the cost of what she called “not a cheap hobby.” Each Polaroid photo can cost as much as $3, which adds up over time.

“I get a lot of comments saying, ‘You make it look so easy,’” Harbour said in a post. “To that I say, I promise you there’s more to it. Ninety percent of what I film while creating these lifts don’t make the cut, simply because it’s a lot of me doing the same thing over and over to achieve the result I want.”

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Exhibit showcases photographer Frank Stewart’s life work

Exhibit showcases photographer Frank Stewart’s life work
Frank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of ArtFrank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of Art

Photographer Frank Stewart, standing in front of his portrait of jazz pianist Ahmad Jamal, talks to press members at the Brandywine River Museum of Art. Photo by Rich Schwartzman.

For the first time in nine years, the Brandywine River Museum of Art has a photography exhibit on display.

“Frank Stewart’s Nexus: An American Photographer’s Journey, 1960s to the Present” runs through Sept. 22.

He began shooting photos at 14 when he and his mother attended the 1963 Martin Luther King March on Washington, D.C.

Now 75, Stewart said at a press preview that he wanted to be a painter, but photography became his primary art.

“My mother was a painter and I wanted to follow in her footsteps and make her proud of me,” he said. “I started painting and then I found out I was terrible.”

Stewart was impatient with painting, he said, because it took too long, but he could shoot 36 exposures in a short time.

“I could find out how many were terrible right away,” he said.

Frank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of ArtFrank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of Art

Stewart’s 1997 “Stomping the Blues” is gelatin silver print from the collection of Rob Gibson of Savannah, Georgia.

Amanda Burdan, the museum’s senior curator, said the Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, institution was interested in Stewart’s work partly because it had been nearly a decade since it offered a photography exhibit.

“We want to introduce it in a smart and thoughtful way,” she said.

The last photography exhibit at the Brandywine was James Welling’s “Things Beyond Resemblance” in August of 2015. It featured photos he took of sites painted by artist Andrew Wyeth, source of one of the museum’s core collections.

“One of the things that we are really attracted to in the larger body of Frank’s work is his social consciousness, his intelligent environmental issues,” Burdan said. “That inspired us to get to know his work more, but it’s really a retrospective of his entire career.”

Stewart’s exhibit

The exhibit — co-curated by Ruth Fine, formerly of the National Gallery of Art in D.C., and Fred Moten, a poet, scholar and professor of performance studies at the NYU Tisch School of Fine Arts, along with Burdan — is broken down into seven sections, with representing a theme.

Frank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of ArtFrank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of Art

“Smoke and the Lovers” taking in Memphis at Hawkins Grill in 1992 is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.

Rituals, Sound Taste Touch, Africa Caribbean New Orleans: Searching for Roots, Artist Portraits Windows Drawings, Social Practice, Cultures in Color, and Chromatic Music. In all, those themes reflect Stewart’s exploration of life and artistic style.

Fine said the Ritual section of the exhibit starts with him taking pictures of the march and reflects his search for his background.

“When he did those,” she said, “he wasn’t an artist yet. He was at the march with his mother and realized something amazing was going on…Beyond that, the Ritual section includes a lot of work that deals with rituals within the African American community or rituals within the spaces he lived.”

But Stewart’s work goes beyond that. He traveled to New Orleans several times after Hurricane Katrina to document the destruction and the attempts to rebuild sections of the city that had been destroyed.

Frank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of ArtFrank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of Art

“Number 1” shows how Stewart used an unavoidable light behind Fidel Castro as part of the image composition.,

He’s traveled extensively and was even able to photograph Fidel Castro while in Cuba.

Stewart said he and other photographers and writers were taken to a room and told not to move from where they were sitting. Castro came in and gave a speech.

There was a light that was on in the background behind Castro. Stewarts wasn’t allowed to change locations and shoot from a different angle to avoid the light, so he made it part of the image’s  composition.

IN THE NEWS: Christina School Board puts Superintendent Shelton on leave

Stewart’s artistic journey has taken him to the streets and clubs to photograph artists, singers, musicians, and everyday people living their lives.

“With this exhibition, we have we have a chance to get a sense of the unlimited range and depth of a contemporary genius,” Moten said in a press release. “[His] combination of loving care for his subjects and thoughtful consideration of his medium is singular and invaluable.”

Rich SchwartzmanRich Schwartzman

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Exhibit Showcases Photographer Frank Stewart’s Life Work – Town Square Delaware LIVE

Exhibit Showcases Photographer Frank Stewart’s Life Work – Town Square Delaware LIVE
imageimage

Photographer Frank Stewart, standing in front of his portrait of jazz pianist Ahmad Jamal, talks to press members at the Brandywine River Museum of Art. Photo by Rich Schwartzman.

For the first time in nine years, the Brandywine River Museum of Art has a photography exhibit on display.

“Frank Stewart’s Nexus: An American Photographer’s Journey, 1960s to the Present” runs through Sept. 22.

He began shooting photos at 14 when he and his mother attended the 1963 Martin Luther King March on Washington, D.C.

Now 75, Stewart said at a press preview that he wanted to be a painter, but photography became his primary art.

“My mother was a painter and I wanted to follow in her footsteps and make her proud of me,” he said. “I started painting and then I found out I was terrible.”

Stewart was impatient with painting, he said, because it took too long, but he could shoot 36 exposures in a short time.

imageimage

“I could find out how many were terrible right away,” he said.

Frank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of ArtFrank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of Art

Stewart’s 1997 “Stomping the Blues” is gelatin silver print from the collection of Rob Gibson of Savannah, Georgia.

Amanda Burdan, the museum’s senior curator, said the Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, institution was interested in Stewart’s work partly because it had been nearly a decade since it offered a photography exhibit.

“We want to introduce it in a smart and thoughtful way,” she said.

The last photography exhibit at the Brandywine was James Welling’s “Things Beyond Resemblance” in August of 2015. It featured photos he took of sites painted by artist Andrew Wyeth, source of one of the museum’s core collections.

“One of the things that we are really attracted to in the larger body of Frank’s work is his social consciousness, his intelligent environmental issues,” Burdan said. “That inspired us to get to know his work more, but it’s really a retrospective of his entire career.”

Stewart’s exhibit

The exhibit — co-curated by Ruth Fine, formerly of the National Gallery of Art in D.C., and Fred Moten, a poet, scholar and professor of performance studies at the NYU Tisch School of Fine Arts, along with Burdan — is broken down into seven sections, with representing a theme.

Frank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of ArtFrank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of Art

“Smoke and the Lovers” taking in Memphis at Hawkins Grill in 1992 is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.

Rituals, Sound Taste Touch, Africa Caribbean New Orleans: Searching for Roots, Artist Portraits Windows Drawings, Social Practice, Cultures in Color, and Chromatic Music. In all, those themes reflect Stewart’s exploration of life and artistic style.

Fine said the Ritual section of the exhibit starts with him taking pictures of the march and reflects his search for his background.

“When he did those,” she said, “he wasn’t an artist yet. He was at the march with his mother and realized something amazing was going on…Beyond that, the Ritual section includes a lot of work that deals with rituals within the African American community or rituals within the spaces he lived.”

But Stewart’s work goes beyond that. He traveled to New Orleans several times after Hurricane Katrina to document the destruction and the attempts to rebuild sections of the city that had been destroyed.

Frank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of ArtFrank Stewart Brandywine River Museum of Art

“Number 1” shows how Stewart used an unavoidable light behind Fidel Castro as part of the image composition.,

He’s traveled extensively and was even able to photograph Fidel Castro while in Cuba.

Stewart said he and other photographers and writers were taken to a room and told not to move from where they were sitting. Castro came in and gave a speech.

There was a light that was on in the background behind Castro. Stewarts wasn’t allowed to change locations and shoot from a different angle to avoid the light, so he made it part of the image’s  composition.

IN THE NEWS: Christina School Board puts Superintendent Shelton on leave

Stewart’s artistic journey has taken him to the streets and clubs to photograph artists, singers, musicians, and everyday people living their lives.

“With this exhibition, we have we have a chance to get a sense of the unlimited range and depth of a contemporary genius,” Moten said in a press release. “[His] combination of loving care for his subjects and thoughtful consideration of his medium is singular and invaluable.”

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Rich SchwartzmanRich Schwartzman

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