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Maxime Du Camp - Vue de Temple de Philoe prise par derrière, matin (Nubie)
Maxime Du Camp
Vue de Temple de Philoe prise par derrière, matin (Nubie)
$3,500
Francis Frith - Baalbec from the South, Syria
Francis Frith
Baalbec from the South, Syria
$325
Sale
$244
Francis Frith - Hall of Columns, Karnac, Egypt
Francis Frith
Hall of Columns, Karnac, Egypt
$400
Sale
$300
Francis Frith - The Colonnade, Island of Philae, Egypt
Francis Frith
The Colonnade, Island of Philae, Egypt
$450
Sale
$338
Francis Frith - The Temple of Maharraka, Nubia
Francis Frith
The Temple of Maharraka, Nubia
$400
Sale
$300
John Beasley Greene - Dendour: Temple 2, Egypt
John Beasley Greene
Dendour: Temple 2, Egypt
$30,000
John Beasley Greene - Second Courtyard, Medinet Habou, Egypt  (Left Wall, South Side at the Southwest Corner)
John Beasley Greene
Second Courtyard, Medinet Habou, Egypt (Left Wall, South Side at the Southwest Corner)
P.O.R.
John Beasley Greene - Thebes: Medinet Habu, Palace of Rameses Meiamun, 2nd Courtyard Facing West
John Beasley Greene
Thebes: Medinet Habu, Palace of Rameses Meiamun, 2nd Courtyard Facing West
$25,000
John Beasley Greene - Thèbes: Medinet-Habou, Palais de Ramses, 2nd Cour Face Nord, Egypt
John Beasley Greene
Thèbes: Medinet-Habou, Palais de Ramses, 2nd Cour Face Nord, Egypt
$32,000
John Beasley Greene - Village de Kalabsch, Egypt
John Beasley Greene
Village de Kalabsch, Egypt
$7,500
Anton Schranz - The Citadel with Mosque and Ruins, Cairo, Egypt
Anton Schranz
The Citadel with Mosque and Ruins, Cairo, Egypt
$12,000
J. Pascal Sebah - Palm Grove with Nubians Along the Nile
J. Pascal Sebah
Palm Grove with Nubians Along the Nile
$40
Sale
$30
By Alex Novak

Francis Frith, The Temple of Komumboo

Beginning on the western coast of Africa and extending across the size of the US, the Saharan desert and its challenges are legend. With a culture that is older than any other, the area became a magnet for young Victorian men (and women). Where the tourist went, so did the photographer.

Beginning in the early 1840s with daguerreotypists Jules Itier and Joseph-Philibert Girault de Prangey, image-makers took on the challenges of the Sahara--with its sand, heat and drying wind--to bring back images of this mysterious land and its people.

Among the earliest photographers were those who found that paper negatives traveled better under the harsh conditions, although a few brave souls, such as Felix Jacques Antoine Moulin, lugged literally tons of glass plates and paraphernalia around northern Africa and later Gustave Le Gray also worked in his preferred medium, the glass plate, despite the daunting conditions.

The list of these early pioneers, who worked primarily with paper negatives, now reads like a Who's Who of early photography. The French photographers who worked in the Saharan regions included Auguste Salzmann, Louis De Clercq, E. Benecke, Felix Teynard, Maxime Du Camp, Gustave de Beaucorps, Pierre Tremaux, Jules Deblet, Theodule Deveria, Henri Sauvaire, and--a bit later--the master Gustave Le Gray, who worked with glass plates. The English had Francis Frith (glass), Frank Mason Good (glass), Rev. Calvert Jones (paper), James Graham (paper) and Robert Murray (paper). America's sole representative was John Buckley Greene (paper). The Germans had Wilhelm Hammerschmidt, who came in the late 1850s and worked with glass plates. And from Malta came Anton Schranz with both paper and glass plates.

We offer a sample of the best images from some of these early pioneers.

Saharan Visions: Early Images of the Orient
About This Exhibit
Image List

Exhibited and Sold By
Contemporary Works / Vintage Works, Ltd.

258 Inverness Circle
Chalfont, Pennsylvania   18914   USA

Contact Alex Novak and Marthe Smith

Email info@vintageworks.net

Phone +1-215-518-6962

Call for an Appointment

 

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