in Rome. In the foreground are a number of small broken stone columns. In the background on the left is the
church of Santa Maria di Loreto, while on the right is
the Column of Trajan. |
Forum of Trajan In 1851, having failed to achieve notice as a painter, Macpherson turned to the new art of photography, using
albumin on
glass negatives. By 1856 he had transitioned to
collodio-albumin, allowing the easier transport of
dry plates. He typically used large-format
negatives and
long exposure times to attain exceptional detail of
Roman architecture,
monuments,
ruins,
landscapes, and
sculptures. His work emphasised careful composition of scenes to capture three-dimensional architectural relationships on the two-dimensional photographic medium. Macpherson emphasised the artistic aspects of his photography, stating in 1863 that "I remain a photographer to this day, without any feeling that by doing so I have abandoned art, or have in any way forfeited my claim to the title of artist." His work received critical acclaim, with "subjects chosen with fine taste and the pictures executed with skill and delicacy." Macpherson was the first photographer permitted to photograph inside the
Vatican, Although resident in Rome, Macpherson remained an active member of the Photographic Society of Scotland. However,
The Scotsman newspaper noted in his obituary that he was "the father of photography in the Eternal City [Rome]." == Later life ==