The Gardner
The Gardner
The Gardner

Julia Christopher

The Gardner

Carmel, California, 2016

Original Gelatin Silver from Wet Plate

Image dimensions: 13" (L) x 10" (H)
Mounted dimensions: 20" (L) x 16" (H)

Pristine condition

certified authentic
Add to Collection — $1,000
The Gardner
The Gardner
The Gardner

Details

Description

Original selenium and Thiourea toned Gelatin Silver by Julia Brett Christopher, "The Gardener, Carmel, California." Individually handmade by Christopher from 4x5 format wet plate collodion with fiber-based Ilford Warmtone paper. Mounted on cotton rag museum board. Signed in pencil on mount with title, date and numbered in a limited edition of 5 on mount verso.

Condition

The HD Video of the actual work in question has been provided as a visual condition report. If you would like a written condition report in addition to the HD video, please

Medium

Negatives made of glass, rather than paper, brought a new level of clarity and detail to photography, making the collodion, or wet-plate, process popular from the 1850s through the 1880s. It was discovered in 1851 by Frederick Scott Archer (1813–1857). As the name suggests, the wet plate process must be completed before the chemicals dry. First, the glass or in Julia’s case, acrylic, plate must be perfectly cleaned. Next, in the dark or in the very feeble light of a dark chamber, collodion, a viscous solution of nitrocellulose dissolved in alcohol and ether, combined with potassium iodide is poured onto the glass plate until evenly coated. The glass is then submerged in a solution of silver nitrate, which reacts with the potassium iodide, making the plate sensitive to light. The sensitized plate is then placed in a camera and exposed. After exposure, the plate is developed in pyrogallic acid. A fixer solution of sodium thiosulfate, or hypo, is necessary to keep the plate from undergoing further exposure. The plate is then washed, dried and if developed as a positive, or tintype/ambrotype, a varnish is then applied to protect the emulsion. Because this was developed as a positive, not a negative, Julia then created a negative from the positive by photographing it with a Pentax 67 macro lens, not by making a digital scan. She likes to stress that for every digital method, there was first a wet-process method. Each gelatin silver in this edition was handmade by her and toned in thiourea and selenium. No two in the edition of 5 are exactly alike.