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Anna
Atkins (1799-1871) was the first woman photographer.
Referred to sparingly by traditional photo historians,
she made beautiful cyanotype images of algae, ferns,
feathers, and waterweeds. Her botanist father, John
George Children, and Sir John Herschel were friends,
and the Atkins and Herschel families resided only 30
miles apart in Kent, England. Children was a member
of the Royal Society, and when his friend Herschel announced
his discovery of the cyanotype (1842), Children quickly
passed the news on to his daughter Anna. Although there
is no conclusive evidence that Herschel was Atkins'
mentor, it is more than probable that she learned the
cyanotype process in the Herschel household.
Anna
Atkins made thirteen known versions of her work entitled
British Algea: Cyanotype Impressions (1843-1853). In
October 1843, Atkins began issuing published folios
of her photogenic (photogram) drawings. In 1850, she
began to publish more comprehensive collections of her
work, completing a three volume anthology in 1853. These
books, containing hundreds of handmade images, were
the very first published works to utilize a photographic
system for purposes of scientific investigation and
illustration. Significantly, they were initiated and
created prior to Talbot’s Pencil of Nature (1844-1846),
a published work that is generally given credit by historians
as the first to have achieved this important milestone.
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