Search

A concrete cantilevered building against blue sky and green landscaping

A large green wall with oil paintings in gold frames above a tiled floor

A museum interior space with paintings and concrete walls and stairs

A concrete-walled lobby with windows, a tiled floor, and a circular desk

The top of a concrete spiral staircase with a wooden railing

A tall tree is the focal point of a garden in between two concrete buildings

About arrow_back

Admission for everyone is always free! Check here for current hours and more.

A concrete cantilevered building against blue sky and green landscaping

Collections arrow_back

The Johnson Museum holds more than 40,000 works in its collection from around the world.

A large green wall with oil paintings in gold frames above a tiled floor

Exhibitions arrow_back

Check out what’s on view this season at the Museum and look back through our history.

A museum interior space with paintings and concrete walls and stairs

Events arrow_back

Free events for everyone, plus special programs for students, families, and more!

A concrete-walled lobby with windows, a tiled floor, and a circular desk

Learn arrow_back

The Johnson Museum actively contributes to the intellectual life of our campus and community.

The top of a concrete spiral staircase with a wooden railing

Support arrow_back

Help the Johnson Museum continue its legacy by making a gift today.

A tall tree is the focal point of a garden in between two concrete buildings

David Octavius Hill, Robert Adamson

(Scottish, 1802–1870)

[Fishwives]

View All Works

Object Details

Artist

David Octavius Hill, Robert Adamson

Date

ca. 1845

Medium

Salted paper print

Dimensions

Image: 5 1/2 × 7 11/16 inches (14 × 19.6 cm)
Sheet: 11 5/8 × 14 7/16 inches (29.6 × 36.6 cm)
Mat: 16 × 20 1/2 inches (40.6 × 52 cm)

Credit Line

Acquired through the Membership Purchase Fund

Object
Number

74.015

David Octavius Hill and Robert Adamson’s photographic collaboration – begun just four years after th(…)

David Octavius Hill and Robert Adamson’s photographic collaboration – begun just four years after the announcement of the discovery of the daguerreotype process – involved making photographs as references from which painters could work. Hill, using his training as a painter and lithographer, set up the shots and arranged backgrounds and costumes, while Adamson manipulated the chemical processes and the cameras. Using the calotype process in which a sheet of smooth paper has been sensitized and then exposed for a period of thirty seconds to five minutes, Hill and Adamson produced more than fifteen hundred photographs of people, landscapes, and buildings in the four and a half years they worked together. Although those who preferred the sharply defined daguerreotype image were not satisfied by the calotype, Hill and Adamson’s fuzzy, painterly pictures illustrate perfectly this most beautiful of nineteenth-century photoprocesses. Some of the best known and most haunting works of Hill and Adamson are the numerous representations of the fisherfolk of Newhaven, a village on the Firth of Forth only two miles from the Rock House, their Edinburgh home and studio. The Newhaven community, founded by Huguenot immigrants, depended to a large degree on the fishing trade for its livelihood. Hill and Adamson’s project was conceived as a way to raise money to improve the working conditions of these “fisherfolk.” The women’s distinctively striped skirts identified the “fisher lassies” as they sold cod, herring, and oysters from their baskets and creels on the streets of Edinburgh. (From “A Handbook of the Collection: Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art,” 1998)

Create an account

Please take a moment to fill your information to create your account.

Reset Password

Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive mail with link to set new password.

Save Artwork

Save the artwork in any of your exhibitions or create a new one.

You have not made any exhibitions.

Create New Exhibition

Create New Exhibition