Portraiture- Social Media

When given the brief of portraiture my mind instantly likes to go to places like Pinterest to get a board together of all my inspirations and see how I could achieve such images, there are many reasons why I like to use Pinterest to gather ideas. 

I like the way in which you can organise all the ideas in the form of a nice and neat mood board of sorts. This is something I do with most things in my life as it adds structure and helps me keep everything neat instead of having hundreds upon hundreds of bookmarks on my browser. 

My board for photography and this brief contains over 180 pins of different ideas that I have come across which could be quite effective for this brief, especially the self-portraiture portion.

2016-03-07 (1)

Portraiture – Brief history

During the early part of the 1800’s, Jacques-Mande Daguerre developed the Daguerreotype. This relied on being put into a camera obscura and then developed in Mercury vapours on a metal plate, this process was only able to capture one image per plate and, this wasn’t very duplicatable which isn’t like today where an image can be duplicated many times over, and have copies everywhere.

The Daguerreotype was highly successful, not in Europe where it was developed, but in America in 1850’s New York. The most successful photographers had studios on the top floor of buildings, just off of Broadway (because of the amount of light that you are able to get, located at the top of buildings, and almost always on the north side because that is where you would get the most amount of natural light.).

This practice was the most common among early photographers and created a one off print which had to be kept under a bit of glass as the slightest knock could ruin the print and was really hard to repair and if it was repaired it had to be done by a professional, which I imagine would be quite expensive.

 

“The vast majority of American photographs made before the Civil War era are portraits.”(The Daguerreian Era and Early American Photography on Paper, 1839–1860 | Essay | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2016)


The first photographic portrait of a human being was of Robert Cornelius in 1839. he inscribed it with “The first light Picture ever taken. 1839.”