B&W & inbetween
B&W & inbetween
If the camera lens was pen, brush, pencil.and charcoal!
"The Pencil of Nature" by Henry Fox Talbot published (1844-46) illustrated with what he described 'the art of photogenic drawings'. Because photography was a new and unknown art technique he found it necessary to explain further what it was: ".. impressed by the agency of Light alone, without any aid whatever from the artist's pencil. They are the sun-pictures themselves.." William Henry Fox Talbot. (His wife Constance calls his cameras "mouse traps”. In a sense the mouses escapes in the early days because of the fading impermanence of the images, a problem he resolved in time.)
If the camera was a pen and pencil
.
If the camera lens was pen, brush, pencil.and charcoal!
"The Pencil of Nature" by Henry Fox Talbot published (1844-46) illustrated with what he described 'the art of photogenic drawings'. Because photography was a new and unknown art technique he found it necessary to explain further what it was: ".. impressed by the agency of Light alone, without any aid whatever from the artist's pencil. They are the sun-pictures themselves.." William Henry Fox Talbot. (His wife Constance calls his cameras "mouse traps”. In a sense the mouses escapes in the early days because of the fading impermanence of the images, a problem he resolved in time.)
If the camera was a pen and pencil
.

Windows of Perception

Long Sight

Authentic Plume

The muse

Peace

Face of an angel

Thought


Glastonbury Tor

River Eden

Wooden expression

Inky branches

Lightness and heaviness of light


Branch



Bubbles


Dancing Partners

Family

Angel and birds


A man and a woman








Pictures at an Exhibition






Le Jardin






Stairway

Cacophony





Wrought shadow

Gasworks

River Thames


Imaginary fish




Hut








Veiled Papyrus


Passageway


