Sunday, January 29, 2017

Albumen and Silver Bromide from Russia

Anonymous Russian photographer
Panoramic view of Neva River and the Winter Palace
ca. 1900
albumen print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Hippolyte Robillard
Portrait of Countess Sophia Bobrinskaya
1869
albumen print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

I absolutely cannot understand why the photograph above has never been used for the dust jacket of Anna Karenina. It looks as if it could not have been created for any other purpose. With the original work of fiction and its original English translations all now in the public domain, there is really no excuse for the non-existence of such an edition.

Anonymous Russian photographer
Park on the Mikhailovka Country Estate
1880s
platinotype
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Anonymous Russian photographer
Chamber Footman in Prussian Livery
ca. 1875-80
albumen print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Anonymous Russian photographer
Park on the Osinovaya-Roshcha Country Estate
ca. 1885
albumen print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Giovanni Bianchi
Portrait of Princess Isabella Gagarina
1867
albumen print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Wilhelm Lapré
Portrait of the Courier Nikolai Nesterov
ca. 1882
albumen print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg 

William Carrick
Portrait of Dead-Game Street-Trader
1860s
albumen print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

William Carrick
St Petersburg Coachmen in Tea-house
1860s
albumen print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Anonymous Russian photographer
Portrait of woodcut-artist Anna Ostroumova-Lebedeva
1921
silver bromide print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

 Anonymous Russian photographer
Enfilade, Catherine Palace, Tsarskoye Selo
1859
albumen print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Giovanni Bianchi
Stroganov Mansion, Sergievskaya Street
1860s
albumen print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Giovanni Bianchi
Façade, Catherine Palace, Tsarskoye Selo
1870s
albumen print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Anonymous Russian photographer
The Bronze Horseman
Étienne-Maurice Falconet's monument to Peter the Great
1872
albumen print
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Catherine the Great hired the prominent French sculptor Étienne-Maurice Falconet to create this gigantic monument in honor of her predecessor. The granite boulder and bronze statue combined are nearly fifty feet tall. Our old friend Denis Diderot, in correspondence with the Empress, secured the job for Falconet, who remained in Russia working on the project from 1766 to 1778. By the time the work was unveiled in 1782, Falconet had been absent from the country for four years, sent away after offending Catherine with his too-copious opinions.

Snuffbox
Switzerland
The Bronze Horseman by Étienne-Maurice Falconet
ca. 1785
enameled gold
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg