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         Talbot Henry Fox:     more books (97)
  1. William Henry Fox Talbot by Geoffery Batchen, 2008-06-04
  2. First Photographs: William Henry Fox Talbot and the Birth of Photography by Arthur Ollman, Carol McCusker, et all 2002-10-01
  3. William Henry Fox Talbot: Traces Of Light (Spanish Edition) by Catherine Coleman, Michael Gray, et all 1899-12-30
  4. Henry Fox Talbot: Selected Texts and Bibliography (World Photographers Reference)
  5. Specimens and Marvels: William Henry Fox Talbot and the Invention of Photography by William Henry Fox Talbot, 1899-12-30
  6. The Correspondence of William Henry Fox Talbot: A Draft Calendar (Glasgow University Library Studies) by Larry J. Schaaf, University of Glasgow Library, et all 1995-01
  7. Fox Talbot: An Illustrated Life of Willian Henry Fox Talbot, 'Father of Modern Photography',1800 -1877 (Shire Library) by John Hannavy, 2008-03-04
  8. The Photographic Art of William Henry Fox Talbot by Larry J. Schaaf, 2003
  9. English Etymologies (1847) by Henry Fox Talbot, 2010-09-10
  10. Henry Fox Talbot by H.J.P. Arnold, 1977-09
  11. William Henry Fox Talbot: Traces of Life by Geoffrey Batchen, Larry J. Schaaf, et all 2002-02
  12. Photography: Essays & Images; Illustrated Readings in the History of Photography by Thomas Wedgwood, William Henry Fox Talbot, et all 1980-01
  13. William H. Fox Talbot, inventor of the negative-positive process [by] Andre Jammes. [English translation by Maureen Oberli-Turner] by William Henry Fox Talbot, 1973-01-01
  14. The Pencil of Nature by William Henry Fox Talbot , 1969

1. El Ángel Caído - Henry Fox Talbot
Henry Fox Talbot. Ships at low tide, 1844.
http://www.elangelcaido.org/fotografos/talbot/talbot01.html
Henry Fox Talbot
Ships at low tide, 1844

2. Fox Talbot Museum Of Photography
Illustrated biography from the fox talbot Museum.Category Arts Photography Masters talbot, William henry fox......William henry fox talbot. Philosopher Lacock Abbey from the River Avon. Calotypeby William henry fox talbot. Lacock Abbey Collection. talbot's
http://www.r-cube.co.uk/fox-talbot/history.html
William Henry Fox Talbot
P hilosopher, classicist, Egyptologist, mathematician, philologist, transcriber and translator of Syrian and Chaldean cuneiform texts, physicist, and photographer. The work that he did between 1834 and 1850 established in principle and practise the foundation of modern photography; the basis of the process that is used today. All texts and images printed in books, magazines, newspapers and journals or on posters are transformed and translated through the negative/positive photographic process, whether or not finally printed lithographically or by photogravure. In addition, all printed circuit boards found in modern computers are miniaturised by photographic reduction and their production uses a process known as photo-polymerisation to etch all the minute tracks and contacts that form the basic motherboards at the heart of all digital electronic systems. The origin of photo-polymerisation can be seen in the early researches of Talbot. Between 1845 and 1860, he discovered the unique property of potassium dichromate to directly harden colloidal gelatine in proportion to the amount of light to which it is exposed. Meanwhile, the idea of photography came to

3. Talbot, W. Henry Fox - Fox Talbot Museum Of Photography
commemorates the life and work of William henry fox talbot one of the greatest figures of the 19th century
http://www.r-cube.co.uk/fox-talbot
The Fox Talbot Museum
commemorates the life and work of William Henry Fox Talbot - one of the greatest figures of the 19th century - mathematician, physicist, classicist, philologist, and transcriber of Syrian and Chaldean cuneiform texts. In late September 1840 he invented the positive / negative process and he is known as The Father of Modern Photography. Lacock Abbey . The permanent exhibition on the ground floor commemorates the achievements of Fox Talbot, photographic pioneer The Upper Gallery area shows at least three exhibitions per year of a broad range of work by some of the most lively and interesting contemporary and 19th century photographers. Fox Talbot Museum, Lacock, Chippenham, Wiltshire, SN15 2LG, England Tel: +44 (0)1249 730 459 Web space donated by R-cube Systems Ltd

4. A History Of Photography, By Robert Leggat: TALBOT, William Henry Fox
Detailed biography from A History of Photography, by Robert Leggat.
http://www.rleggat.com/photohistory/history/talbot.htm
TALBOT, William Henry Fox b. 11 February 1800; d. 17 September 1877 His signature is Henry Talbot, and though he is said to have disliked being called Fox Talbot, that name has stuck. Though Fox Talbot was not the first to produce photographs, he made a major contribution to the photographic process as we know it today. Talbot studied the classics and mathematics at Cambridge, was elected a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1822, and a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1832. He was also an MP, Biblical scholar, a Botanist and Assyriologist, making a contribution to the deciphering of cuneiform inscriptions brought to England from Nineveh. Though some of his pictures show a measure of artistic taste, it was his inability to draw which caused him to experiment with a mechanical method of capturing and retaining an image. Talbot attempted to draw with the aid of both a camera obscura and a camera lucida when producing his sketches, one of which was Villa Melzi. Later he wrote:

5. Body
Thorough biography by Steven Loomis.
http://www.monkey.sbay.org/~srl/papers/phtg/talbot.html
William Henry Fox Talbot Steven R. Loomis for Phtg 20, W. Q. Castano June 11, 1998 W. H. F. Talbot can not be said to have invented photography, but he was certainly an important figure in the history of this new art. Many inventions are the product of generations of research. Among his many other innovations, Talbot gave us the negative-positive method that is used today, and also worked to popularize photography. His work in photography does not tell the entire story of this colorful and interesting character. When Talbot was born in 1800, his name and estate already had quite a bit of prestige associated with it. Lacock Abbey was built in 1232 by a Countess, the half sister-in-law to the King. It was converted into a private home and the Talbot family married into it in the 1500's. The Talbots were close to kings and other high ranking people. The last direct male line ended in 1714, but twice before WHF Talbot's birth, a husband had assumed the Talbot name from his wife to carry on the name (and the estate). The Fox-Strangway were even closer to high politics. Lady Elisabeth Theresa Fox-Strangways, Talbot's mother, was a very intelligent woman whose interests included linguistics and politics. She definitely had a tremendous influence on Talbot, who inherited her love of learning and of these subjects, and she stayed close to him her entire life. He often wrote her in French, Latin, and Greek.

6. Talbot’s Correspondence:Entry Page
A project transcribing the more than 10000 letters written to and from the British polymath best Category Arts Photography Masters talbot, William henry fox......The Project is preparing a comprehensive edition of the nearly 10,000 lettersto and from talbot (18001877), the Wiltshire polymath best known for his
http://www.foxtalbot.arts.gla.ac.uk/
The Project is preparing a comprehensive edition of the nearly 10,000 letters to and from Talbot (1800-1877), the Wiltshire polymath best known for his invention of photography. The full transcriptions of all the letters will be completely searchable within the website and final publication is expected by autumn 2003.
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7. Masters Of Photography: William Henry Fox Talbot
TO VIEW PHOTOGRAPH CLICK TO VIEW MORE SLIDES Photographs by WilliamHenry fox talbot. Site copyright 19992001 by webgalleries.com.
http://www.masters-of-photography.com/T/talbot/talbot.html

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Photographs by William Henry Fox Talbot

8. BBC - History - William Henry Fox Talbot (1800 - 1877)
An eminent mathematician and pioneer who put together three basic processes of photography developing, fixing and printing. William henry fox talbot (1800 1877). While fox talbot did not invent photography, he discovered the process that has
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/talbot_william_henry_fox.shtml

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William Henry Fox Talbot (1800 - 1877)
While Fox Talbot did not invent photography, he discovered the process that has underpinned most photography for the last 160 years. On honeymoon at Lake Como in 1833, he was trying to sketch the scenery there. His lack of success led him to dream up a new machine with light-sensitive paper that would make the sketches for him automatically. He began work on this upon his return home. Fox Talbot went on to develop the three primary elements of photography: developing, fixing, and printing. Although simply exposing photographic paper to the light produced an image, it required extremely long exposure times. By accident, he discovered that there was an image after a very short exposure. Although he could not see it, he found he could chemically develop it into a useful negative. The image on this negative was then fixed by washing with salt solution and hypo. This removed the light-sensitive silver and enabled the picture to be viewed in bright light. With the negative image, Fox Talbot realised he could repeat the process of printing from the negative. Consequently, his process could make any number of positive prints, unlike the Daguerreotypes. He patented his process in 1841, and the following year was rewarded with a medal from the Royal Society for his work. Fox Talbot was also an eminent mathematician, a competent astronomer, and a translator of the cuneiform inscriptions from Nineveh. He patented a variety of machines, including internal combustion engines, and in 1851 is thought to have taken the world's first photograph with a high-speed flash.

9. Fox Talbot Museum Of Photography
William henry fox talbot. Philosopher, classicist, Egyptologist, mathematician, philologist, transcriber and translator
http://r-cube.co.uk/fox-talbot/history.html
William Henry Fox Talbot
P hilosopher, classicist, Egyptologist, mathematician, philologist, transcriber and translator of Syrian and Chaldean cuneiform texts, physicist, and photographer. The work that he did between 1834 and 1850 established in principle and practise the foundation of modern photography; the basis of the process that is used today. All texts and images printed in books, magazines, newspapers and journals or on posters are transformed and translated through the negative/positive photographic process, whether or not finally printed lithographically or by photogravure. In addition, all printed circuit boards found in modern computers are miniaturised by photographic reduction and their production uses a process known as photo-polymerisation to etch all the minute tracks and contacts that form the basic motherboards at the heart of all digital electronic systems. The origin of photo-polymerisation can be seen in the early researches of Talbot. Between 1845 and 1860, he discovered the unique property of potassium dichromate to directly harden colloidal gelatine in proportion to the amount of light to which it is exposed. Meanwhile, the idea of photography came to

10. Laycock
Joan Harrison article about the first photographer reads in part, Think about how you are seeing fox talbot's image now; a reproduction of a reproduction of a reproduction of a reproduction transmitted as a virtual image over the internet.
http://phoenix.liu.edu/~jharriso/laycock.html
by Joan Harrison In the 1830's in England, William Henry Fox Talbot was inspired to "invent" photography by his lack of success as an artist using the camera obscura. He dreamed of capturing the projected "fairy" pictures and developed a process whereby silver salts were coated on paper, exposed to light and the resulting image fixed as if drawn by "the pencil of nature". Talbot's oldest surviving image made with a camera was of the Oriel window at his family estate, Laycock Abbey. This negative created in 1835 predates the historically recorded "birth" of photography by four years. Before this time there were no photographic prints and until the turn of the twentieth Century there was no means of photo-mechanical reproduction. Think about how you are seeing Fox Talbot's image now; a reproduction of a reproduction of a reproduction of a reproduction transmitted as a virtual image over the internet. Fox Talbot's original image is in the Science Museum of London. You can see the Oriel Window and the birthplace of paper based photography by visiting Laycock Abbey and the Fox Talbot Museum in Wiltshire, England.

11. Masters Of Photography: William Henry Fox Talbot
William henry fox talbot Text from The Encyclopedia of Photography(1984). talbot, William henry fox British 18001877. William
http://www.masters-of-photography.com/T/talbot/talbot_articles1.html
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Text from The Encyclopedia of Photography Talbot, William Henry Fox
British 1800-1877 William Henry Fox Talbot, scholar, scientist, and photographic pioneer, was the discoverer of the negative-positive process of photography in the late 1830s. He was also the author and publisher of the first book to use photographs as illustrations. Talbot's earliest experiments led to "photogenic drawings" made by placing objects on paper sensitized with silver chloride and exposing them to the light. By 1841 Talbot had invented and patented the calotype process. He was among the few early practitioners who foresaw the wide range of uses of photography. Talbot's distinguished career in science began when he was elected to the Royal Astronomical Society while a student of classics and mathematics at Trinity College in Cambridge, where he received his M.A. degree in 1825. In 1832 he became a Fellow of the Royal Society, a group of British scientists, on the basis of a series of mathematical papers. He served in Parliament in 1833-1834. In 1843 Talbot started the first printing house for the mass-production of photographic prints. The following year he published

12. Laycock
by Joan Harrison In the 1830's in England, William henry fox talbot was inspired to "invent" photography by his lack of success as an artist using the camera obscura.
http://www.phoenix.liu.edu/~jharriso/laycock.html
by Joan Harrison In the 1830's in England, William Henry Fox Talbot was inspired to "invent" photography by his lack of success as an artist using the camera obscura. He dreamed of capturing the projected "fairy" pictures and developed a process whereby silver salts were coated on paper, exposed to light and the resulting image fixed as if drawn by "the pencil of nature". Talbot's oldest surviving image made with a camera was of the Oriel window at his family estate, Laycock Abbey. This negative created in 1835 predates the historically recorded "birth" of photography by four years. Before this time there were no photographic prints and until the turn of the twentieth Century there was no means of photo-mechanical reproduction. Think about how you are seeing Fox Talbot's image now; a reproduction of a reproduction of a reproduction of a reproduction transmitted as a virtual image over the internet. Fox Talbot's original image is in the Science Museum of London. You can see the Oriel Window and the birthplace of paper based photography by visiting Laycock Abbey and the Fox Talbot Museum in Wiltshire, England.

13. Laycock
Joan Harrison article about the first photographer reads in part,"Think about how you are seeing Category Arts Photography Masters talbot, William henry fox......In the 1830's in England, William henry fox talbot was inspired to invent photography by his lack of success as an artist using the camera obscura.
http://phoenix.liunet.edu/~jharriso/laycock.html
by Joan Harrison In the 1830's in England, William Henry Fox Talbot was inspired to "invent" photography by his lack of success as an artist using the camera obscura. He dreamed of capturing the projected "fairy" pictures and developed a process whereby silver salts were coated on paper, exposed to light and the resulting image fixed as if drawn by "the pencil of nature". Talbot's oldest surviving image made with a camera was of the Oriel window at his family estate, Laycock Abbey. This negative created in 1835 predates the historically recorded "birth" of photography by four years. Before this time there were no photographic prints and until the turn of the twentieth Century there was no means of photo-mechanical reproduction. Think about how you are seeing Fox Talbot's image now; a reproduction of a reproduction of a reproduction of a reproduction transmitted as a virtual image over the internet. Fox Talbot's original image is in the Science Museum of London. You can see the Oriel Window and the birthplace of paper based photography by visiting Laycock Abbey and the Fox Talbot Museum in Wiltshire, England.

14. William Henry Fox Talbot (Getty Museum)
Learn about William henry fox talbot from the J. Paul Getty Museum's collections,with links to works of art and images. Artists. William henry fox talbot,
http://www.getty.edu/art/collections/bio/a2005-1.html

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In 1833, after failed attempts at drawing using the camera lucida , an optical tool, William Henry Fox Talbot wrote: "[H]ow charming it would be if it were possible to cause these natural images to imprint themselves durably, and remain fixed upon the paper!" Talbot, a scientist, mathematician, and author, is credited with being one of the inventors of photography. In mid-1834 he began to experiment with light-sensitive chemistry, corresponding with the preeminent astronomer and scientist Sir John Herschel about their mutual photographic discoveries. By 1835 Talbot had placed his photographic investigations on hold to pursue other interests. Not wanting to be outdone, however, Talbot announced his invention of the photogenic drawing in January 1839, two weeks after Louis-Jacques Mandé Daguerre's daguerreotype process was introduced in France. Talbot's negative/positive process, the calotype , was introduced in 1840. His invention, which shortened exposure times and allowed multiple prints to be made from a single negative, became the basis for photography as it is practiced today.

15. In Focus: William Henry Fox Talbot (Getty Bookstore)
In Focus William henry fox talbot Photographs from the J. Paul GettyMuseum Museum Staff, In Focus William henry fox talbot, J. Paul
http://www.getty.edu/bookstore/titles/talbot.html

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In Focus: William Henry Fox Talbot
Photographs from the J. Paul Getty Museum Museum Staff
J. Paul Getty Museum
144 pages, 6 x 7 5/8 inches 50 color illustrations ISBN 0-89236-660-5 paper, $17.50 August 2002 "A valuable addition to photography collections." Choice The Getty Museum's collection of photographs includes approximately three hundred fifty by Talbot, and approximately fifty are reproduced here in full color with commentary on each image by Larry J. Schaaf, author of The Photographic Art of William Henry Fox Talbot. Schaaf also provides an introduction to the book and a chronological overview of the artist's life. This book includes an edited transcript of a colloquium on Talbot's career with participants Schaaf; Michael Ware, honorary fellow in chemistry, University of Manchester, England; Goeffrey Batchen, associate professor of photography, University of New Mexico; Nancy Keeler, independent photohistorian; James Fee, photographer and instructor at Art Center College of Design, Pasadena; Weston Naef, curator of photographs at the Getty Museum; and David Featherstone, independent editor and curator. Series: In Focus Price: $17.50

16. Talbot
William henry fox talbot. henry fox talbot studied at Cambridge and wrote paperson elliptic integrals, building on work of Euler, Legendre, Jacobi and Abel.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Talbot.html
William Henry Fox Talbot
Born: 11 Feb 1800 in Melbury Abbas, Dorset, England
Died: 17 Sept 1877 in Lacock Abbey (near Chippenham), Wiltshire, England
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to see two larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Henry Fox Talbot studied at Cambridge and wrote papers on elliptic integrals , building on work of Euler Legendre Jacobi and Abel . For this work he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1831. In addition to his mathematical work, Talbot also published on astronomy and physics. He gave the Bakerian lecture to the Royal Society in 1837 with the title Further observations on the optical phenomena of crystals and he received the Royal Medal from the Royal Society in 1838. In 1833 Talbot was elected to parliament but retired one year later. He was a close friend of John Herschel and together they studied light. An interest in chemistry, together with his interest in light, took him into photography and he is best remembered for his pioneering work in this area. In 1844 he published Pencil of nature the first photographically illustrated book. He was also interested in archaeology and was one of the first to translate the cuneiform writing from Nineveh.

17. References For Talbot
References for henry fox talbot. Books HJP Arnold, William henry foxtalbot pioneer of photography and man of science (London, 1977).
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Talbot.html
References for Henry Fox Talbot
  • Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990).
  • Biography in Encyclopaedia Britannica. Books:
  • H J P Arnold, William Henry Fox Talbot : pioneer of photography and man of science (London, 1977).
  • A Hawkyard, William Henry Fox Talbot : scientist, inventor, classicist (Harrow School, 1989). Articles:
  • R Cull, Biographical Notice of the late William Henry Fox Talbot, Society of Biblical Archaeology. Transactions
  • M Nakazaki, Talbot's invention of photographic engraving and various studies in his last years (Japanese), Bull. Fac. Liberal Arts Chukyo Univ. Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index
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  • 18. Profotos - William Henry Fox Talbot
    Learn more about photographer William henry fox talbot at Profotosin our Masters of Photography section! William henry fox talbot
    http://www.profotos.com/education/referencedesk/masters/masters/williamhenryfoxt
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    PHOTOGRAPHER LIST William Henry Fox Talbot
    William Henry Fox Talbot

    One of Photography's Earliest Forefathers to the Modern Craft
    Biography: Philosopher, classicist, Egyptologist, mathematician, philologist, transcriber and translator of Syrian and Chaldean cuneiform texts, physicist, and photographer.
    The work that he did between 1834 and 1850 established in principle and practise the foundation of modern photography; the basis of the process that is used today. All texts and images printed in books, magazines, newspapers and journals or on posters are transformed and translated through the negative/positive photographic process, whether or not finally printed lithographically or by photogravure. In addition, all printed circuit boards found in modern computers are miniaturised by photographic reduction and their production uses a process known as photo-polymerisation to etch all the minute tracks and contacts that form the basic motherboards at the heart of all digital electronic systems. The origin of photo-polymerisation can be seen in the early researches of Talbot. Between 1845 and 1860, he discovered the unique property of potassium dichromate to directly harden colloidal gelatine in proportion to the amount of light to which it is exposed.

    19. Photo Binbook: "Books By Or About William Henry Fox Talbot"
    William henry talbot, William henry fox henry talbot (Photographer), NationalMuseum Of Photography Published by Aperture Foundation, Incorporated.
    http://www.binbooks.com/books/photo/i/l/5BDF6AF095
    Photo Binbook Top folder Master Photographers F William Henry Fox Talbot Author: Subject: Books by or about William Henry Fox Talbot Sort by date Previous Next
    Correspondence of William Henry Fox Talbot: A Draft Calendar Larry John Schaaf University of Glasgow Library Staff William Henry Fox Talbot Published by University of Glasgow Format: Hardcover ISBN: Pub. Date: January 1995 check used book prices First Photographs: William Henry Fox Talbot and the Birth of Photography William Henry Fox Henry Talbot Arthur Ollman Michael Gray Published by powerHouse Cultural Entertainment, Incorporated Format: Hardcover ISBN: Pub. Date: September 2002 $30.60 at A1Books
    $31.50 at Amazon.com

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    Fox Talbot and the Invention of Photography Gail Buckland William Henry Fox Talbot (Illustrator) Published by Godine, David R. Format: Hardcover ISBN: Pub. Date: January 1980 check used book prices Fox Talbot, Photographer Robert Lassam Published by Kent State University Press Format: Hardcover ISBN: Pub. Date: January 1979 check used book prices Format: Paperback ISBN: Pub. Date:

    20. Photo Binbook: "William Henry Fox Talbot" Folder
    subject. Selecting this link will take you directly to the folder 'MasterPhotographers/F/William henry fox talbot'. Photo Binbook.
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