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[OM] World's Oldest Photograph (LONG)

Subject: [OM] World's Oldest Photograph (LONG)
From: ClassicVW@xxxxxxx
Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2002 16:42:23 EST
Intersting article in its own right, but the last two paragraphs are also of 
interest to us!
--George S.
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Oldest Known Photograph to Undergo Analysis
Scientific Experts Will Analyze 1826 Photo for First Time Since 
Authentication in 1952

By ANDREW BRIDGES
.c The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES (March 13) - One summer morning, Joseph Nicephore Niepce peered 
from an upstairs window in his home in the French countryside, framed the 
view of a pear tree, the sky and several farm buildings and did something 
remarkable: He took a picture.

Opening the lens of a rudimentary camera for eight hours that day in 1826, 
Niepce exposed a polished, thinly varnished pewter plate to produce an image 
that is acknowledged as the world's first photograph.

In June, 176 years later, the faint image will arrive at The Getty 
Conservation Institute, where scientific experts will analyze it for the 
first time since it was rediscovered and authenticated in 1952. Before it 
turned up, the photo had been missing for decades, misplaced by its owner 
after it was last exhibited in 1898.

Exact details of its chemistry remain a mystery, leaving experts with 
precious little information about the science behind the photo.

''There are legends about how it was done and with what materials, but no one 
really knows,'' said Dusan Stulik, a Getty senior scientist who calls the 
work the ''Mona Lisa'' of the photo world.

The analysis is part of a joint photo conservation project involving Getty, 
the Image Permanence Institute at the Rochester Institute of Technology and 
France's Centre de Recherches sur la Conservation des Documents Graphiques.

The goal is to understand all the chemical processes used since Niepce's day 
to produce photographs, which conservators say is essential to preserve the 
art form.

During the 8-by-6.5-inch photograph's two-week stay in Los Angeles, 
scientists will study it with advanced scientific instruments, assess its 
state of preservation and construct a new airtight case.

In 2003, it will go on display again at the University of Texas at Austin's 
Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, its home since 1964.

Conservators have a theory about how Niepce's photograph was produced. They 
believe light hardened the bitumen, a petroleum derivative sensitive to light 
that Niepce (pronounced NEE-yeps) used to coat the plate. Washing the plate 
with a mixture of oil of lavender and white petroleum dissolved the unexposed 
portions of bitumen.

The result was a permanently fixed, direct positive picture - the first ever 
captured from nature. Niepce called his work a ''heliograph,'' in a tribute 
to the power of the sun.

''What we are so familiar with today in terms of images and being able to 
snap pictures, this is where it all began,'' said Barbara Brown, who will 
accompany the artifact to California as head of photographic conservation at 
the Ransom Center.

In the Getty Institute's laboratories, scientists will use spectrometers to 
determine the photograph's chemical makeup. They hope to discover what 
substances Niepce may have used to enhance the bitumen's properties.

Using a digital microscope, they plan to map the image's surface in detail. 
Multispectral imaging will look for oxidation that could threaten the 
photograph.

Meanwhile, conservators will repair the gilt frame. And experts will try to 
photograph the work, an almost impossible chore because the image is so faint 
and can be seen only at oblique angles.

All the methods will be quick, reliable and noninvasive, said Herant 
Khanjian, an assistant scientist at the Getty.

Stulik, the Getty senior scientist, said he fears the days of traditional, 
nondigital photography are numbered, making the need to understand its 
chemistry - from Niepce to Polaroid - all the more pressing.

Ultimately, he said, advances in digital photography may do for its chemical 
counterpart what the printing press did to the handwritten manuscript in the 
1400s.

''It ended it,'' Stulik said.

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