WHAT DO THIS WOMAN & THIS MAN HAVE IN COMMON?
A. THEY ARE THE NEXT REALITY STARS CHOSEN TO BE IN MTV'S SPRING SHOW JERSEY SHORE: EUROPEAN VACATION
B. THEY HAVE BEEN WRITING LOVE LETTERS FOR 2 DECADES AND FINALLY GOT MARRIED AFTER FINDING EACH OTHER ON FACEBOOK
C. BOTH THESE PHOTOGRAPHS WERE TAKEN IN THE EARLY 1900'S
D. THESE WERE ANNIE LEIBOVITZ'S FIRST PORTRAITS WHICH JUST FETCHED OVER $15 MILLION AT SOTHEBY'S NYC
I know you are just on the EDGE OF YOUR SEAT wondering what the answer is.....
I'll give you a hint:
Alim Khan, Emir of Bukhara early 1900 |
Model, 1905 |
I find this incredibly fascinating. For us, color photographs are the norm. Actually, high-definition color is now the norm. When I look at photographs taken in 1900, I feel so disconnected to the people and the times not only because of the different fashions and styles, but also because the photographs were pretty rustic, that I have an image in my mind that life at that time as flat, not glossy and vibrant like it is now.
THIS IS A PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN AT THE SAME TIME, ALSO IN RUSSIA, BUT IN COLOR BY PROKUDIN-GORSKY. All of a sudden I connect to this one, because now I can see the bright colors in the dress and the detail in the girls' faces. If I hadn't of known what year this was taken, I would swear it was from a LIFE Magazine taken this year. It's amazing how much seeing an image in color changes our perspective. The opposite is also true. Seeing an image in black & white also changes our perspective.
Group of workers harvesting tea in Chakva. Photo taken by Prokudin-Gorsky at the turn of the century |
Autumn Village in Gorki, Borodino, 1911. Prokudin-Gorsky |
Emir Mir Mohammed Alim Khan, the last Emir of Bukhara, now modern day Uzbekistan. Alim Khan was the last emir to have any local power. The dynasty was abolished by the Bolsheviks. From here. |
*Prokudin-Gorsky's own research yielded patents for producing color film slides and for projecting color motion pictures. His process used a camera that took a series of three monochrome pictures in sequence, each through a different-colored filter. By projecting all three monochrome pictures using correctly colored light, it was possible to reconstruct the original color scene. Any stray movement within the camera's field of view showed up in the prints as multiple "ghosted" images, since the red, green and blue images were taken of the subject at slightly different times.
Composite of Alleia Hamerops by Prokudin-Gorsky showing the color process |
**Each exposure, which would usually take anything between three and six seconds, was made with a different coloured filter in front of the lens: red, green and blue.
The triple negatives would then be laid on top of one another and placed in a projector that created a single, full-colour composite.
Photohraph by Prokudin-Gorsky taken of an unknown man, circa 1905-1915 |
Zindan Prison in Bukhara, 1907 |
What I also find interesting about the scope of his work, is that we get to see every aspect of life in Eastern Europe, not just the nobility. He shows us writers, prisoners, farmers, workers, poets, tsars, military, and children. The list goes on. From these color photographs, I really get a sense for life in his country at this time, more than any black & white image could give me.
Joiners Shop for Dressing Sheath, circa 1905-1915 |
Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky, Self-Portrait on the Korolistskai River, 1915 |
*It has been estimated from Prokudin-Gorsky's personal inventory that before leaving Russia, he had about 3500 negatives. Upon leaving the country and exporting all his photographic material, about half of the photos were confiscated by Russian authorities for containing material that was strategically sensitive for war-time Russia. According to Prokudin-Gorsky's notes, the photos left behind were not of interest to the general public. Some of Prokudin-Gorsky's negatives were given away,and some he hid on his departure. Outside the Library of Congress collection, none have yet been found.
Due to the difficulty in reproducing prints of sufficient quality from the negatives, only some hundred were used for exhibits, books and scholarly articles after the Library of Congress acquired them. The best-known is perhaps the 1980 coffee table book Photographs for the Tsar: The Pioneering Color Photography of Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii Commissioned by Tsar Nicholas II, where the photos were combined from black-and-white prints of the negatives.
* information quoted from Wikipedia
** information quoted from Independent.co.uk