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The invention of the Daguerreotype caused considerable concern
to many artists, who saw their means of livelihood coming to an end. Delaroche
is credited with claiming that painting was now dead, whilst it is said
that Sir William Ross, on his death-bed in 1860, commented sadly that
"it was all up with future miniature painting." It is also claimed, but
with scanty evidence, that Turner, looking at an early daguerreotype,
commented that he was glad he had had his day!
Charles Baudelaire despised photography as being a product of industry.
He felt it provided an impression of reality that did not have the 'spiritual
momentum' which came from the imagination. Whilst reviewing a photographic
exhibition in 1859, clearly saw the need to put photography firmly in
its place:
"If photography
is allowed to supplement art in some of its functions, it will soon
have supplanted or corrupted it altogether....its true duty..is to be
the servant of the sciences and arts - but the very humble servant,
like printing or shorthand, which have neither created nor supplemented
literature....
"Let it rescue from oblivion those tumbling ruins, those books, prints
and manuscripts which time is devouring, precious things whose form
is dissolving and which demand a place in the archives of our memory
- it will be thanked and applauded.
But if it is allowed to encroach upon the domain of the... imaginary,
upon anything whose value depends solely upon the addition of something
of a man's soul, then it will be so much the worse for us."
Some painters dubbed
the new invention "the foe-to-graphic art." Certainly those artists who
specialised in miniature portraits suffered; in 1810 over 200 miniatures
were exhibited at the Royal Academy; this rose to 300 in 1830, but thirty
years later only sixty-four were exhibited, and in 1870 only thirty-three.
On the other hand, the painter, Gustave Courbet, recognised photography
as a useful aid in depicting motifs. However, his paintings seem to illustrate,
by the thickness of colour, that he saw photography as consisting merely
of a copy of reality, and that painting went much further.
A number of artists, seeing the writing on the wall, turned to photography
for their livelihood, whilst others cashed in on the fact that the images
were in monochrome, and began colouring them in. Baudelaire's assertion
that photography had become "the refuge of failed painters with too little
talent" was rather unfair, but it is true that a number turned to this
new medium for their livelihood. By 1860 Claudet was able to claim
that miniature portraits were no longer painted without the assistance
of photography.
In any case, absolute likeness was not always what the sitter wanted.
Alfred Chalon, one of the last miniaturists, when asked by Queen Victoria
whether photography was a threat to miniature painting, replied "No Madam
- photography can't flatter!" Lady Eastlake, wife of the Director of the
National Gallery (who also was the first President of the Photographic
Society) also had her reservations, claiming that whilst photography was
more exact, it had also become less true, and that in portraiture the
broad suggestion of form had been replaced by a fussy accumulation of
irrelevant detail:
"Every button is
seen - piles of stratified flounces in most accurate drawing are there
- but the likeness to Rembrandt and Reynolds is gone!"
Clearly she did not
share the dread that painting was an art of the past.
However, a further
blow to miniature portraiture was to come when the Carte-de-Visite
craze began to develop. By 1857 an Art Journal was reporting that portrait
photography was becoming a public nuisance, with photographers touting
for custom (much as artists do today at the Montmartre, in Paris). "It
has really now become a matter for Police interference both on the grounds
of propriety and public comfort!" the writer thundered. In that same journal
Francis Frith claimed that photography "has already almost entirely
superseded the craft of the miniature painter, and is on the point of
touching, with an irresistible hand, several other branches of skilled
art."
In 1865 Claudet, by then a respected photographer, came to the
defence of photography, following a blistering article in a French journal:
"One cannot but
acknowledge that there are arts which are on their way out and that
it is photography which has given them the death-blow! Why are there
no longer any miniaturists? For the very simple reason that those who
want miniatures find that photography does the job better and instead
of portraits more or less accurate where form and expression are concerned,
it gives perfectly exact resemblances that at least please the heart
and satisfy the memory."
Miniature painting,
in fact, made a comeback at the turn of the century.
Though photography was seen by some as the invention that was killing
art, this is a one-sided view, because it also proved to be an aid to
their work. Portrait photographers found that by employing photography
the number of sittings required could be reduced or even eliminated. Joshua
Reynolds sometimes needed up to fifty sittings for portraits; it is said
that his painting of Sir George Beaumont had required twelve sittings
for the painting of the cravat alone!
A problem is that few painters would readily admit to using photography
as an aid, almost as though this were a form of cheating! David Octavius
Hill used photography to make a record of people to be painted, whilst
in the 1860s Robert Howlett was employed to take photographs of
groups of people attending the Derby from the top of a cab, these photographs
later being used as group studies in William Powell Frith's painting "Derby
Day." This however did not stop William Powell Frith from observing, thirty
years later, that in his opinion photography had not benefited art at
all. Others who used photography to assist them in painting included Negre,
Tissot, Gaugin, Cèzanne, Lautrec, Delacroix and Degas.
An example of photography being used for this purpose can be seen in a
portrait of Sir William Allen, by Sir John Watson Gordon (1837), Royal
Academy; this clearly comes from an 1843 Calotype. Also Muybridge,
whose work led to a change in the way artists painted horses on the move.
Man Ray, born later than this period, made an interesting observation
on this apparent controversy.
By Dr. Robert Leggat
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