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giovedì 21 luglio 2022

Louis Daguerre (Cormeilles-en-Parisis, 18 novembre 1787 – Bry-sur-Marne, 10 luglio 1851) Artist and Photographer

 Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre (/dəˈɡɛər/ (isten) də-GAIR, French: [lwi ʒɑk mɑ̃de daɡɛʁ]; 18 November 1787 – 10 July 1851) was a French artist and photographer, recognized for his invention of the eponymous daguerreotype process of photography. He became known as one of the fathers of photography. Though he is most famous for his contributions to photography, he was also an accomplished painter, scenic designer, and a developer of the diorama theatre. 

Biography

Louis Daguerre was born in Cormeilles-en-Parisis, Val-d'Oise, France. He was apprenticed in architecture, theatre design, and panoramic painting to Pierre Prévost, the first French panorama painter. Exceedingly adept at his skill of theatrical illusion, he became a celebrated designer for the theatre, and later came to invent the diorama, which opened in Paris in July 1822.

In 1829, Daguerre partnered with Nicéphore Niépce, an inventor who had produced the world's first heliograph in 1822 and the oldest surviving camera photograph in 1826 or 1827. Niépce died suddenly in 1833, but Daguerre continued experimenting, and evolved the process which would subsequently be known as the daguerreotype. After efforts to interest private investors proved fruitless, Daguerre went public with his invention in 1839. At a joint meeting of the French Academy of Sciences and the Académie des Beaux Arts on 7 January of that year, the invention was announced and described in general terms, but all specific details were withheld. Under assurances of strict confidentiality, Daguerre explained and demonstrated the process only to the Academy's perpetual secretary François Arago, who proved to be an invaluable advocate. Members of the Academy and other select individuals were allowed to examine specimens at Daguerre's studio. The images were enthusiastically praised as nearly miraculous, and news of the daguerreotype quickly spread. Arrangements were made for Daguerre's rights to be acquired by the French Government in exchange for lifetime pensions for himself and Niépce's son Isidore; then, on 19 August 1839, the French Government presented the invention as a gift from France "free to the world", and complete working instructions were published. In 1839, he was elected to the National Academy of Design as an Honorary Academician.

Daguerre died, from a heart attack, on 10 July 1851 in Bry-sur-Marne, 12 km (7 mi) from Paris. A monument marks his grave there.

Daguerre's name is one of the 72 names inscribed on the Eiffel tower.

Development of the daguerreotype

In the mid-1820s, prior to his association with Daguerre, Niépce used a coating of bitumen of Judea to make the first permanent camera photographs. The bitumen was hardened where it was exposed to light and the unhardened portion was then removed with a solvent. A camera exposure lasting for hours or days was required. Niépce and Daguerre later refined this process, but unacceptably long exposures were still needed.

After the death of Niépce in 1833, Daguerre concentrated his attention on the light-sensitive properties of silver salts, which had previously been demonstrated by Johann Heinrich Schultz and others. For the process which was eventually named the daguerreotype, he exposed a thin silver-plated copper sheet to the vapour given off by iodine crystals, producing a coating of light-sensitive silver iodide on the surface. The plate was then exposed in the camera. Initially, this process, too, required a very long exposure to produce a distinct image, but Daguerre made the crucial discovery that an invisibly faint "latent" image created by a much shorter exposure could be chemically "developed" into a visible image. Upon seeing the image, the contents of which are unknown, Daguerre said, "I have seized the light – I have arrested its flight!"

The latent image on a daguerreotype plate was developed by subjecting it to the vapour given off by mercury heated to 75 °C. The resulting visible image was then "fixed" (made insensitive to further exposure to light) by removing the unaffected silver iodide with concentrated and heated salt water. Later, a solution of the more effective "hypo" (hyposulphite of soda, now known as sodium thiosulfate) was used instead.

The resultant plate produced an exact reproduction of the scene. The image was laterally reversed—as images in mirrors are—unless a mirror or inverting prism was used during exposure to flip the image. To be seen optimally, the image had to be lit at a certain angle and viewed so that the smooth parts of its mirror-like surface, which represented the darkest parts of the image, reflected something dark or dimly lit. The surface was subject to tarnishing by prolonged exposure to the air and was so soft that it could be marred by the slightest friction, so a daguerreotype was almost always sealed under glass before being framed (as was commonly done in France) or mounted in a small folding case (as was normal in the UK and US).

Daguerreotypes were usually portraits; the rarer landscape views and other unusual subjects are now much sought-after by collectors and sell for much higher prices than ordinary portraits. At the time of its introduction, the process required exposures lasting ten minutes or more for brightly sunlit subjects, so portraiture was an impractical ordeal. Samuel Morse was astonished to learn that daguerreotypes of the streets of Paris did not show any people, horses or vehicles, until he realized that due to the long exposure times all moving objects became invisible. Within a few years, exposures had been reduced to as little as a few seconds by the use of additional sensitizing chemicals and "faster" lenses such as Petzval's portrait lens, the first mathematically calculated lens.

The daguerreotype was the Polaroid film of its day: it produced a unique image which could only be duplicated by using a camera to photograph the original. Despite this drawback, millions of daguerreotypes were produced. The paper-based calotype process, introduced by Henry Fox Talbot in 1841, allowed the production of an unlimited number of copies by simple contact printing, but it had its own shortcomings—the grain of the paper was obtrusively visible in the image, and the extremely fine detail of which the daguerreotype was capable was not possible. The introduction of the wet collodion process in the early 1850s provided the basis for a negative-positive print-making process not subject to these limitations, although it, like the daguerreotype, was initially used to produce one-of-a-kind images—ambrotypes on glass and tintypes on black-lacquered iron sheets—rather than prints on paper. These new types of images were much less expensive than daguerreotypes, and they were easier to view. By 1860 few photographers were still using Daguerre's process.

The same small ornate cases commonly used to house daguerreotypes were also used for images produced by the later and very different ambrotype and tintype processes, and the images originally in them were sometimes later discarded so that they could be used to display photographic paper prints. It is now a very common error for any image in such a case to be described as "a daguerreotype". A true daguerreotype is always an image on a highly polished silver surface, usually under protective glass. If it is viewed while a brightly lit sheet of white paper is held so as to be seen reflected in its mirror-like metal surface, the daguerreotype image will appear as a relatively faint negative—its dark and light areas reversed—instead of a normal positive. Other types of photographic images are almost never on polished metal and do not exhibit this peculiar characteristic of appearing positive or negative depending on the lighting and reflections.

Competition with Talbot

Unbeknownst to either inventor, Daguerre's developmental work in the mid-1830s coincided with photographic experiments being conducted by William Henry Fox Talbot in England. Talbot had succeeded in producing a "sensitive paper" impregnated with silver chloride and capturing small camera images on it in the summer of 1835, though he did not publicly reveal this until January 1839. Talbot was unaware that Daguerre's late partner Niépce had obtained similar small camera images on silver-chloride-coated paper nearly twenty years earlier. Niépce could find no way to keep them from darkening all over when exposed to light for viewing and had therefore turned away from silver salts to experiment with other substances such as bitumen. Talbot chemically stabilized his images to withstand subsequent inspection in daylight by treating them with a strong solution of common salt.

When the first reports of the French Academy of Sciences announcement of Daguerre's invention reached Talbot, with no details about the exact nature of the images or the process itself, he assumed that methods similar to his own must have been used, and promptly wrote an open letter to the Academy claiming priority of invention. Although it soon became apparent that Daguerre's process was very unlike his own, Talbot had been stimulated to resume his long-discontinued photographic experiments. The developed out daguerreotype process only required an exposure sufficient to create a very faint or completely invisible latent image which was then chemically developed to full visibility. Talbot's earlier "sensitive paper" (now known as "salted paper") process was a printed out process that required prolonged exposure in the camera until the image was fully formed, but his later calotype (also known as talbotype) paper negative process, introduced in 1841, also used latent image development, greatly reducing the exposure needed, and making it competitive with the daguerreotype.

Daguerre's agent Miles Berry applied for a British patent under the instruction of Daguerre just days before France declared the invention "free to the world". The United Kingdom was thereby uniquely denied France's free gift, and became the only country where the payment of license fees was required. This had the effect of inhibiting the spread of the process there, to the eventual advantage of competing processes which were subsequently introduced into England. Antoine Claudet was one of the few people legally licensed to make daguerreotypes in Britain.

Diorama theatres

In the spring of 1821, Daguerre partnered with Charles Marie Bouton with the common goal of creating a diorama theatre. Daguerre had expertise in lighting and scenic effects, and Bouton was the more experienced painter. However, Bouton eventually withdrew, and Daguerre acquired sole responsibility of the diorama theatre.

The first diorama theatre was built in Paris, adjacent to Daguerre's studio. The first exhibit opened 11 July 1822 showing two tableaux, one by Daguerre and one by Bouton. This would become a pattern. Each exhibition would typically have two tableaux, one each by Daguerre and Bouton. Also, one would be an interior depiction, and the other would be a landscape. Daguerre hoped to create a realistic illusion for an audience, and wanted audiences to be not only entertained, but awe-stricken. The diorama theatres were magnificent in size. A large translucent canvas, measuring around 70 ft wide and 45 ft tall, was painted on both sides. These paintings were vivid and detailed pictures, and were lit from different angles. As the lights changed, the scene would transform. The audience would begin to see the painting on the other side of the screen. The effect was awe-inspiring. "Transforming impressions, mood changes, and movements were produced by a system of shutters and screens that allowed light to be projected- from behind- on alternately separate sections of an image painted on a semi-transparent backdrop" (Szalczer).

Because of their size, the screens had to remain stationary. Since the tableaux were stationary, the auditorium revolved from one scene to another. The auditorium was a cylindrical room and had a single opening in the wall, similar to a proscenium arch, through which the audience could watch a "scene". Audiences would average around 350, and most would stand, though limited seating was provided. Twenty-one diorama paintings were exhibited in the first eight years. These included ‘Trinity Chapel in Canterbury Cathedral’, ‘Chartres Cathedral’, ‘City of Rouen’, and ‘Environs of Paris’ by Bouton; ‘Valley of Sarnen’, ‘Harbour of Brest’, ‘Holyroodhouse Chapel’, and ‘Roslin Chapel’ by Daguerre.

The Roslin Chapel was known for a few legends involving an unconsuming fire. The legend goes that the Chapel has appeared to be in flames just before a high-status death, but has later shown no damage from any such fire. This chapel was also known for being unique in its architectural beauty. Daguerre was aware of both of these aspects of Roslin Chapel, and this made it a perfect subject for his diorama painting. The legends connected with the chapel would be sure to attract a large audience. Interior of Roslin Chapel in Paris opened 24 September 1824 and closed February 1825. The scene depicted light coming in through a door and a window. Foliage shadows could be seen at the window, and the way the light's rays shone through the leaves was breathtaking and seemed to "go beyond the power of painting" (Maggi). Then the light faded on the scene as if a cloud was passing over the sun. The Times dedicated an article to the exhibition, calling it "perfectly magical".

Diorama became a popular new medium, and imitators arose. It is estimated that profits reached as much as 200,000 francs. This would require 80,000 visitors at an entrance fee of 2.50 francs. Another diorama theatre opened in Regent's Park, London, taking only four months to build. It opened in September 1823. The most prosperous years were the early to mid-1820s.

The dioramas prospered for a few years until going into the 1830s. Then, inevitably, the theatre burned down. The diorama had been Daguerre's only source of income. At first glance, the event was tragically fateful. But the enterprise was already close to its end, thus losing the diorama tableaux was not completely disastrous, considering the funds granted under the insurance.

Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre (Cormeilles-en-Parisis, 18 novembre 1787 – Bry-sur-Marne, 10 luglio 1851) è stato un artista, chimico e fisico francese, riconosciuto universalmente come l'inventore del processo fotografico chiamato dagherrotipo.  

Biografia

Aveva trascorso l'infanzia presso Orléans dove il padre era impiegato nella tenuta reale. Iniziò a lavorare agli allestimenti dell'Opéra de Paris, facendosi così una notevole esperienza nel campo del disegno e della scenografia.

Fu allievo di Pierre Prévost, il primo pittore francese di panorami. Pittore e scenografo teatrale sarà lui a inventare l'utilizzo a teatro del diorama, una sorta di fondale dipinto con l'aiuto della camera oscura, su cui venivano proiettate luci e colori di intensità diversa in modo da creare effetti molto particolari. In questa attività si avvale della fondamentale collaborazione del pittore Hippolyte Sebron, al quale però nega qualsiasi riconoscimento attribuendo a sé ogni dipinto.

Dal 1824 inizia a fare esperimenti per riuscire a fissare l'immagine ottenuta attraverso la camera oscura. Inizia una corrispondenza con Joseph Niépce, e sei anni dopo la morte di quest'ultimo, Daguerre riuscirà a mettere a punto la tecnica che prenderà il suo nome, la dagherrotipia. Questa sarà resa pubblica nel 1839 dallo scienziato François Arago in due distinte sedute pubbliche presso l'Académie des Sciences e dell'Académie des beaux-arts.

L'invenzione, resa di pubblico dominio, frutterà all'autore, e al figlio di Niépce, una pensione vitalizia, donatagli dal Governo in cambio della libera circolazione dei dettagli del processo.

Louis Daguerre morì il 10 luglio 1851 a causa di un attacco cardiaco, a Bry-sur-Marne, a 12 chilometri da Parigi. Sulla sua tomba è stato costruito un monumento in suo onore.

Il suo nome è stato inciso sulla facciata La Bourdonnais della Torre Eiffel.

Onorificenze

Cavaliere della Classe di Pace dell'Ordine Pour le Mérite (Regno di Prussia) - nastrino per uniforme ordinaria     Cavaliere della Classe di Pace dell'Ordine Pour le Mérite (Regno di Prussia)     — 1842 

Influenze, citazioni e omaggi

  • Il dagherrotipo prende il nome da Louis Daguerre.
  • A Louis Daguerre è dedicato 3256 Daguerre, un asteroide della fascia principale.
  • Anche il cratere Daguerre sulla Luna prende il nome dall'inventore.

Daguerre, Louis Jacques Mandé - Anordnung von Muscheln (Zeno Fotografie). Creato: tra il 1837 e il 1839

Daguerre, Louis Jacques Mandé: Daguerre photographiert aus seiner Wohnung im dritten Stock des Boulevard Saint-Martin Nr.17
 1839

Detail of Boulevard du Temple by Louis-Jacques Mandé Daguerre (1787 - 1851): a man who stood still getting his boots polished long enough to show.Creato: 1838/1839

Diorama de Louis Daguerre, en cours de restauration, panneau central, Bry-sur-Marne, France
 

Daguerre, Louis Jacques Mandé: Ein Künstler, vielleicht Charles Arrowsmith Creato: tra il 1842 e il 1843

Intérieur de l'Église Saint-Gervais-et-Saint-Protais de Bry-sur-Marne avec diorama de Louis Daguerre visant à donner l'illusion que l'église se prolonge en cathédrale gothique (dispositif de rétroéclairage)

 

Louis-Jacques Daguerre - Intérieur d'une chapelle de l'église des Feuillants à Paris. 1814

Daguerre, Interior of Rosslyn Chapel, olio su tela , 1824
 

Daguerre kynzvart.

 Still life with statue of Jupiter Tonans, whole-plate daguerreotype by Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre. One of the specimens exhibited to the French Chamber of Deputies in July 1839 when it was considering the award of pensions to Daguerre and Isidore Niépce in exchange for the rights to Daguerre's still-secret process. Later in 1839 Daguerre made a gift of it to the Austrian Chancellor Metternich.

 



Louis Daguerre/Charles-Marie Bouton - Le Campo Santo de Pise - 1834/1839 - Vu peu éclairé - Collection particulière.

 

Daguerre, Louis Jacques Mandé: Louise Georgina Daguerre  Creato: 1845 circa 

Daguerre - Niebla y nieve en las montañas, vistas a través de una ruina gótica  1826

Daguerre Notre Dame et lÎle de la-Cité vers 1838

 

Daguerre Notre Dame et lÎle de la-Cité vers 1838 - non flopped

Daguerre, Louis Jacques Mandé: Notre-Dame von der Pont des Tournelles Creato: tra il 1838 e il 1839
 
Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre - Paris, vu de la Butte Montmartre - P64 - Musée Carnavalet 1830
 
Louis Daguerre, Paysage, 1934. Exposé à la mairie de Bry-sur-Marne 
 

Plan et coupe du Diorama de Louis Daguerre à Londres

Almanach des Spectacles, 1823, p. 240. Licenza Questa è una fedele riproduzione fotografica di un'opera d'arte bidimensionale originale. L'opera d'arte fotografata è nel pubblico dominio per la seguente ragione: Quest'opera è nel pubblico dominio anche in tutti i Paesi e nelle aree in cui la durata del copyright è la vita dell'autore più 70 anni o meno. Devi inserire anche un tag per il pubblico dominio relativo agli Stati Uniti per indicare perché quest'opera è nel pubblico dominio negli Stati Uniti. Nota che in alcuni Paesi i termini del copyright durano più di 70 anni: in Messico 100, in Giamaica 95, in Colombia 80, in Guatemala e Samoa 75 anni. Questa immagine potrebbe non essere nel pubblico dominio in questi Paesi, che inoltre non applicano la regola della durata più breve. La Costa d'Avorio ha un termine generale di 99 anni, mentre nell'Honduras è di 75 anni, ma questi Paesi applicano la regola della durata più breve. Questo file è stato identificato come libero da restrizioni conosciute riguardanti le leggi sul copyright, compresi tutti i diritti connessi e vicini. La posizione ufficiale presa dalla Wikimedia Foundation è che le riproduzioni fedeli di opere d'arte bidimensionali nel pubblico dominio siano da considerare anch'esse nel pubblico dominio, e che qualsiasi affermazione contraria rappresenta un attacco al concetto stesso di pubblico dominio ("faithful reproductions of two-dimensional public domain works of art are public domain, and that claims to the contrary represent an assault on the very concept of a public domain"). Per maggiori dettagli, vedi Commons:When to use the PD-Art tag. Questa riproduzione fotografica è di conseguenza da considerarsi nel pubblico dominio. Per favore, fai attenzione al fatto che, a seconda delle leggi locali, il riutilizzo di questo contenuto potrebbe essere proibito o limitato nella tua giurisdizione. Vedi Commons:Reuse of PD-Art photographs. {{PD-Art}} template without license parameter: please specify why the underlying work is public domain in both the source country and the United States (Usage: {{PD-Art|1=|deathyear=''year of author's death''|country=''source country''}}, where parameter #1 can be PD-old-auto, PD-old-auto-expired, PD-old-auto-1996, PD-old-100 or similar. See Commons:Multi-license copyright tags for more information.) 

Plaque apposée sur le mur de la caserne Vérines, rue Léon-Jouhaux, Paris 10e, marquant l'emplacement du diorama et du laboratoire de Louis Daguerre, détruits par un incendie en 1839. Texte : « Ici s'élevait de 1822 à 1839 le diorama de Daguerre et le laboratoire où celui-ci perfectionnant l'invention de Joseph Nicéphore Niépce découvrit le daguerréotype »
 
Polyorama panoptique par Louis Daguerre, peinture à transparence, Bry-sur-Marne, France 
 
Daguerre, Louis Jacques Mandé: Samuel F.B. Morse 1845
 
Daguerre, Louis Jacques Mandé: Stilleben mit Abdrücken 1837
 
Daguerre, Louis - The Effect of Fog and Snow Seen through a Ruined Gothic Colonnade - 1826
 
The oldest preserved photographic portrait is attributed to Louis Daguerre and is entitled "M. Huet 1837".
 
Louis Daguerre - The Ruins of Holyrood Chapel -  Creato: About 1824
 
Daguerre, Louis Jacques Mandé: Triptychon für König Ludwig I. von Bayern, der Boulevard du Temple in Paris  1839
 
Daguerre, Louis Jacques Mandé: Triptychon für König Ludwig I. von Bayern, der Boulevard du Temple in Paris am Mittag  1939
 
Daguerre, Louis Jacques Mandé: Triptychon für König Ludwig I. von Bayern, der Boulevard du Temple in Paris um acht Uhr morgens, Stilleben mit Gipsabgüssen 1839

View from the Daguerres house 
Louis Daguerre -   1839
 
Jean Baptiste Sabatier-Blot - Louis Jacques Mande Daguerre - 1844
 
Tombe de Louis Daguerre, cimetière de Bry-sur-Marne. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 











 

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