PicsArt Monthly June Issue 2014 | Page 74

A Brief Introduction to Photo History Although photography as we know it is among the youngest of the major art forms, its history can be traced back to ancient times. Chinese philosopher MoZi discussed the principles of a camera obscura in the 4th or 5th century BCE. For two thousand years it was known as a small dark room (or box) with a tiny hole in one wall, through which light shone and projected an inverted image. During the late 1500s, Giambattista della Portia perfected its design by adding a convex lens to the hole, making a sharper, more detailed image. Camera obscuras allowed artists to trace a scene in ink for a more faithful reproduction. The Early Days of Image Processing The 18th and 19th centuries saw a multitude of methods for image processing and creation. In 1727, Johann Schulze mixed chalk, silver, and nitric acid - a very early photosensitive compound - noting that one side of the flask darkened when exposed to sunlight. In 1816, Joseph Nicéphore Niépce created the world's first photograph by coating a metal plate in a silver chloride solution and exposing it to light for 8 hours. However, he did not discover a way of permanently fixing 74| PicsArt Monthly the image for another decade. William Henry Fox Talbot applied Niépce's recipe to paper in 1834, fixing the images with a salt solution and eventually patenting the first paper negative as the “Calotype” in 1841. Meanwhile, Louis Daguerre was creating the Daguerrotype by coating copper sheets in silver iodide, creating a metal negative which he developed in a solution of mercury. These two inventions lead to the creation of photography. To that end, on August 19, 1839 the French government publicly acknowledged the invention of photography. The first glass negative was made by Frederick Scott Archer in 1851 using a wet plate collodion process. During the 1850s, the tintype photograph emerged; this made the negative image appear positive by exposing it onto a dark-coloured metal sheet coated with collodion, which made the shadows appear light and the highlights dark. In 1861, James Clerk-Maxwell realized that he could photograph a scene three times, through a red, blue, and green filter, and project the images on top of each other to create a full-colour image. Finally, in 1871, Richard Leach Maddox suspended the silver solution in gelatin, creating the dry emulsion which sent photography skyrocketing. It was applied first to glass negatives, but would later find its way onto the thin plastic film that made photography possible for the public at large.