Nineteenth century '' cartoon 'Quite English, You Know!
Britain Anna Atkins, who was also an accomplished
watercolorist, in her cyanotype botanical specimens, is considered the first to make art with the medium in which the sea plants appear suspended in an oceanic blue, and while her hundreds of images satisfy a scientific curiosity, their aesthetic quality has served as inspiration for cyanotype artists ever since. Cyanotype photography was popular in
Victorian England, but became less popular as photography improved. By the mid-1800s few photographers continued to exploit its accessible qualities and at the
Great Exhibition of 1851, despite extensive displays of photographic technology, only a single example of the cyanotype process was included.
Peter Henry Emerson exemplified the British attitude that cyanotypes were unworthy of purchase or exhibition with his assertion that: "No one but a vandal would print a landscape in red, or in cyanotype." Consequently, the process devolved to the proofing of domestic negatives by hobbyist photographers and to
postcards, though another British scientist, Fellow of the
Royal Astronomical Society Washington Teasdale, delivered hundreds of lectures throughout his lifetime and was among the first to illustrate them with
lantern slides, and, up to 1890, to record his experiments and specimens, used the cyanotype, a collection of which is held at the
Museum of the History of Science, Oxford.
Edwin Linley Sambourne used cyanotypes as an archive of reference images for his
Punch cartoons.
France Curators and practitioners in France embraced the process. Caricaturist, illustrator, writer and portrait photographer
Bertall (born Charles Albert, vicomte d' Arnoux, comte de Limoges-Saint-Saëns) as partner of
Hippolyte Bayard was commissioned in the 1860s to make cyanotype portraits from glass negatives for the Société d'Ethnographie for their publication
Collection anthropologique. While artistic in execution they also satisfy with the scientific interests of the group as each subject is photographed nude with front, back and profile views, not in the field but in his studio. The project also takes advantage of the ease of making multiples of cyanotypes for the publication
Henri Le Secq's cyanotypes, which he made after he gave up photography after 1856 to continue painting and collecting art, were reprints of his famous works and made around 1870 as he was afraid of possible loss due to fading. He gave the reprints dates of the original negatives, some of which are still in good condition.
United States In the US the medium persevered into the 20th century.
Eadweard Muybridge made cyanotype contact prints of his animal locomotion sequences, and
Edward Curtis' ethnographic cyanotypes of native North Americans are preserved in the
George Eastman House.
Pictorialism Pictorialists, throughout Europe and other western countries, in efforts to have photography accepted as an art form, emphasised handcraft in printing, in imitation of painting and drawing, and drew on
Symbolist subject matter and themes. Many of the practitioners were respected amateurs whose work was rewarded in a system of international 'salons' run by such organisations as the
Camera Club of New York, and competition promoted an elevated level of technical experimentation with all of the then-current processes, such as
calotypy, cyanotypy,
gum printing,
platinum printing,
bromoil and
Autochrome colour.
Clarence White's impeccable domestic and plein-air pictures are indebted in their bold composition to his contemporaries the painters
Thomas Wilmer Dewing,
William Merritt Chase and
John White Alexander. His labor-intensive process entailed developing the negatives then making tests on cyanotype, playing with dimensions, proportions, and other variables, before making a print in platinum, which he then meticulously and expressively retouched.
Alfred Steiglitz in White's portrait of him (1907) held in Princeton University Art Museum, appears gloweringly critical in the cyanotype print preserved there. At the turn of the century, painter-photographer
Edward Steichen, then associated with Alfred Steiglitz who promoted the
Photo-Secession and Pictorialism through his
Camera Work (1903–1917) produced prints of
Midnight Lake George now held in
The Alfred Stieglitz Collection: Photographs at the Art Institute of Chicago where in 2007 scientific examination of the prints and his records concluded that cyanotype had been incorporated in their predominant gum bichromate over platinum production. Steichen argued provocatively in the first issue of
Camera Work that "every photograph is a fake from start to finish, a purely impersonal, unmanipulated photograph being practically impossible." Another American Pictorialist
Fred Holland Day made cyanotypes of youths, nude or in sailor suits, in 1911, that are held in the Library of Congress, and French artist Charles-François Jeandel printed his erotic imagery of bound women in his painting workshop in Paris and then in Charente 1890–1900. The more traditional American printmaker
Bertha Jaques, aligned with the antimodernist views of the late Victorian
Arts and Crafts movement, from 1894 produced more than a thousand cyanotype photographs of wildflowers.
Impressionism American artist
Theodore Robinson painted in
Giverny 1887–1892, contemporaneous with
Monet of whom he made a portrait in cyanotype, and of the haystacks that Monet famously painted. He noted that "Painting directly from nature is difficult as things do not remain the same; the camera helps to retain the picture in your mind." He often drew a grid over his cyanotypes or albumen prints to assist transferring the composition, with compositional amendments, onto canvas, though conscious that "I must beware of the photo, get what I can of it and then go." His photographic imagery is held in the
Canajoharie Library and Art Gallery and the Terra Foundation for the Arts. a cyanotype, related to his interest, while studying in France, in the flat, decorative qualities of Japanese art and that of
Les Nabis. In Europe,
Josef Sudek, the 'Poet of Prague' sometimes employed the cyanotype to impressionist effect during the early Modernist period. Milan-born photographer, printmaker, painter, set designer and experimental film-maker,
Luigi Veronesi, well-informed about the international debate on abstraction, was impressed with the abstract potential of the photogram. He participated in a 1934 exhibition in Paris with the international group of abstract artists '
Abstraction-Création', through which he met with
Fernand Léger. He drew inspiration from Léger's
Ballet Mécanique, Surrealism via the
Metaphysical painting of
Georgio de Chirico, and fellow photographer
Giuseppe Cavalli with whom, convinced of the essential 'uselessness' of art, in 1947 he founded a group named
La Bussola (The Compass). Influenced by
Constructivist theories (and politically aligned with Communism), Veronesi used the cyanotype photogram after 1932 as a means of revealing metaphysical qualities in objects.
Late modern (1981)
The Blue Room, cyanotype on fabric, mixed media. In a 2008 essay A.D. Coleman perceived a return of the legacy Pictorialist methods being applied in art photography from 1976, Weston Naef, curator of photography at the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, in a 1998
New York Times article by critic Lyle Rexer, confirmed that "Looking back at [photography's] pioneers, today's artists see a way to restore expression to an art beguiled by technology," referring to the loss of 'intimacy' in digital imaging to account for artists' attraction to daguerreotypes, tintypes, cyanotypes, stereopticon images, albumen prints, collodion wet plates; all physical and 'hands-on' methods. Artists
David McDermott and Peter McGough, who met in the East Village New York art scene of the 1980s, and until 1995 took the phenomenon to the extreme of reconstructing themselves as Victorian gentlemen, adopting the lifestyle and documenting it and their possessions using vintage cameras and materials, first inspired by their discovery of the cyanotype, and dating their contemporary works in the nineteenth century.
Contemporary . Cyanotype on handmade paper Since 2000 around 10 books, and in growing numbers, are published each year in English in which 'cyanotype' appears in the title, compared to only 95 in total from 1843 to 1999. Though it has been an artform since its inception, the numbers of artists now employing the cyanotype process have burgeoned, and they are not solely photographers. In the book of the 2022 British exhibition
Squaring the Circles of Confusion: Neo-Pictorialism in the 21st Century eight contemporary artists:
Takashi Arai, Céline Bodin,
Susan Derges, David George,
Joy Gregory,
Tom Hunter, Ian Phillips-McLaren and Spencer Rowell employ the craft of photography for postmodern purpose, including the cyanotype.
International Many were included in the first American international survey of the cyanotype in 2016; the Worcester Art Museum's ''Cyanotypes: Photography's Blue Period'' which displayed uses of the medium that extend well beyond the utilitarian contact-printing of negatives; Annie Lopez stitched together cyanotypes printed on tamale paper to create dresses; Brooke Williams tea-toned her cyanotypes, adjusting their color to accord with her story as a Jamaican American woman; and Hugh Scott-Douglas experimented with photograms and abstraction. In 2018, the
New York Public Library exhibited the work of nineteen contemporary artists who employ the medium. Mounted 175 years after Anna Atkin's first book of cyanotypes,
British Algae, the exhibition was titled
Anna Atkins Refracted: Contemporary Works. Amongst others currently working in, or with, cyanotype are;
United States Christian Marclay who suggests musical scores in his grids of cassette tapes or their unspooling.
Kate Cordsen applies Japanese aesthetics and non-Cartesian perspective in her mural-scale cyanotype landscapes.
Betty Hahn was early to incorporate cyanotype with other art media including hand-painting with
embroidery as a feminist statement
Meghann Riepenhoff reprises Anna Atkins by exposing her prepared papers underneath the waves, so light filters through moving sand, shells, and water currents.
Canada Canadian
Erin Shirreff translates her sculptural interests into large-scale cyanotype photograms of temporary three-dimensional compositions in her studio with hours-long exposures during which component forms are moved, added or subtracted for transparent effect.
Germany German artist
Marco Breuer abrades cyanotype prints on watercolour paper in representations of the passing of time.
Iceland Icelandic artist and filmmaker
Inga Lísa Middleton employs the cyanotype for nostalgic representations of her homeland, and as a symbolic colour in imagery alerting audiences to an emerging catastrophe in the marine environment.
United Kingdom British-born American resident
Walead Beshty's Barbican Art Gallery installation of 12,000 cyanotype prints traces a visual time line from October 2013 to September 2014 in a work called
A Partial Disassembling of an Invention Without a Future: Helter-Skelter and Random Notes in Which the Pulleys and Cogwheels Are Lying Around at Random All Over the Workbench, produced from each object from the artists' studio being exposed on cyanotype-coated found paper, card or wood. ==World Cyanotype Day==