St Stephen’s Cathedral, Vienn

Christian Joseph Berres, 1840

Immediately after the invention of the daguerreotype process was announced in August 1839 in Paris, the Viennese doctor Joseph Berres began experimenting with etching the photographic plates in nitric acid, then printing them directly onto paper using an intaglio press. His technique was quite successful, as is apparent in this booklet, called ‘Phototyp,’ which Berres sent to the Dutch Academy of Sciences in 1840.

  • Artwork typeprint, page, photomechanical print
  • Object numberBI-B-2644-3
  • Dimensionsheight 86 mm x width 85 mm
  • Physical characteristicsafdruk van geëtste daguerreotypieplaat

Identification

  • Title(s)

    St Stephen’s Cathedral, Vienn

  • Object type

  • Object number

    BI-B-2644-3

  • Inscriptions / marks

    • name: ‘Berres’
    • inscription: ‘2 [...]’

Creation

  • Creation

    • photographer: Christian Joseph Berres, Universiteit van Wenen
    • printmaker: Christian Joseph Berres, Vienna
  • Dating

    1840

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Material and technique

  • Physical description

    afdruk van geëtste daguerreotypieplaat

  • Dimensions

    height 86 mm x width 85 mm


This work is about

  • Subject

  • Place


Acquisition and rights


Documentation

  • J.F. Heijbroek, 'De herkomst van een zeldzaam fotoboekje', De Boekenwereld bij 33 (2017) nr. 3, p. 47.


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