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The glass plates of Ludwig Bickell: Invaluable sources for art history and the history of photography, for conservation and cultural studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2020
Abstract
The photography collection of the German documentation centre for art history, Deutsches Dokumentationszentrum für Kunstgeschichte – Bildarchiv Foto Marburg (DDK), comprises more than 2.8 million objects. These include roughly 500,000 glass negatives, of which nearly 3,000 were made by the first Hessian state conservator Ludwig Bickell between 1870 and 1901. These early glass plates show a large number of retouchings and traces of their production and usage. This makes them rich sources for photographic and art historical or cultural historical research as well as conservation studies.
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- © ARLIS, 2020
References
1. On Richard Hamann, his usage of photography as well as the history of the photographic archive and with much further reading, see Matyssek, Angela, Kunstgeschichte als fotografische Praxis. Richard Hamann und Foto Marburg (Berlin: Mann, 2009)Google Scholar.
2. Hamann, Richard, Der Magdeburger Dom. Beiträge zur Geschichte und Ästhetik mittelalterlicher Architektur, Ornamentik und Skulptur (Berlin: Grote, 1909)Google Scholar, ‘Vorwort’. See also catalogue No. 63 (‘Der Magdeburger Dom. Denkmäler Deutscher Kunst’) of Dr. Franz Stoedtner – Institut für wissenschaftliche Projection. The Stoedtner photographic archive has been part of the DDK collection since 1977.
3. The Marburg print collection goes back even further. The first photographs were bought in 1889, when art history was being taught at the department of archaeology.
4. “Übernommene Archive,” Deutsches Dokumentationszentrum für Kunstgeschichte – Bildarchiv Foto Marburg, accessed 25 September 2019, https://www.uni-marburg.de/de/fotomarburg/bestaende/uebernahmen.
5. The photographs of Ludwig Bickell are accessible online via the database of the DDK ‘Bildindex der Kunst und Architektur’, https://www.bildindex.de/bilder/gallery/encoded/eJzjYBJS42IvyEzWTczJEeJPykzOTs3J0VHIKU0pz0yXYnb0c1FiLsnJ1mIAAOgQC08*.
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7. On Ludwig Bickell and his work as a conservator, see with much further reading Elmar Brohl and Gerhad Menk (eds.), Ludwig Bickell (1838–1901). Ein Denkmalpfleger der Ersten Stunde (Stuttgart: Theiss, 2005). Ulrich Großmann has published a short article on the photographer Ludwig Bickell: Großmann, Ulrich, “Ludwig Bickell als Fotograf,” Fotogeschichte 3, no. 10 (1983): 3–12Google Scholar.
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11. “Wet plate collodion,” in Graphics Atlas, accessed 25 September 2019, http://www.graphicsatlas.org/identification/?process_id=352.
12. Hessisches Staatsarchiv Marburg (HStAM), 340 Bickell, 261 “Geschäfts Kalender.”
13. Großmann noticed the relatively rare interior photographs, but interprets this as a mere selective choice. I believe that this is a question of time and patience.
14. HStAM, 340 Bickell.
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20. So far, only single prints have been found in collections, archives or libraries.
21. In early times, collotypes were often varnished with shellac or gelatin coating in order to make them look like real photographs. See Stulik, Dusan C. and Kaplan, Art, “Collotype,” in The Atlas of Analytical Signatures of Photographic Processes (Los Angeles: The Getty Conservation Institute 2013), 11Google Scholar.
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27. Bickell, Ludwig, Hessische Holzbauten, vols. 2 and 3 (Marburg: N. G. Elwert, 1891)Google Scholar.
28. E.g. plate 41 (timber heads, Frankenberg) from the 1891 publication (DDK, call no. 810.760), which was printed as an object in front of a white background as plate 15 in the 1906 publication.
29. See, for instance, plate 23 from the 1887 publication showing houses in Waldkappel that had beautiful clouds added to the sky in the 1906 collotype.
30. HStAM, 340 Bickell, 181.
31. Menk, “Ein ‘antiquitätischer Herr,’” 42.
32. Bickell, Ludwig, Die Bau- und Kunstdenkmäler im Regierungsbezirk Cassel. Kreis Gelnhausen (Marburg: N. G. Elwert'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1901)Google Scholar.
33. “Gelatin dry plate,” in Graphics Atlas, accessed 25 September 2019, http://www.graphicsatlas.org/identification/?process_id=303.
34. See, for instance, negatives no. 811.334 or 811.999a. These negatives have an iridescent surface known more typically for collodion print out papers.
35. See, for instance, negative no. 811.060d.
36. See, for instance, negatives no. 811.045a through 811.045e.