This beautiful art will soon overcome the obstacle of price and time… To achieve this end, it is necessary to replace the silver salts which are employed today, by the ordinary drawing of the positives by roller printing… M. Ch. Nègre has kindly placed at our disposal… a specimen of skill, demonstrating what one operator has already achieved in the practice of these processes. [1]
The printing of photographic positives was a laborious and inefficient process whose results varied from print to print, and prohibitive costs often meant that each project never saw completion. In the 1850s, the desire of photographers to follow the model of engravers and lithographers in the distribution of near-exact copies to a wide market base was still technically unfeasible. This problem formed the context for Nègre’s turn to experiment with photogravure as a viable means to pull permanent and standard prints by traditional printing methods.
Nègre first experimented with the open, unpatented process of Niépce de Saint-Victor in the years 1854–55. After testing a series of improvements, Nègre patented his own process in 1856. An early example of Negre’s process titled ‘Paris en miniature, Hotel de Cluny’ appeared as the frontis in Monckhoven’s famous treatise overview, Traité Général De Photographie (1856). The plate was made before November, 1854.
One of the earliest photogravures to appear in a book.
Heilbrun, Françoise. Charles Nègre, Photographe: 1820-1880 ; Arles, Musée Réattu, 5.7. – 17.8.1980. Paris: Éd. des musées nationaux, 1980. no. 138.
Hanson, David A. Checklist of Photomechanical Processes and Printing, 1825-1910. , 2017. p. 94, Clark Institute Library, GEM
Mattie Bloom, New Realities: Photography in the 19th Century Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, 2017, fig 151
La Photographie III Collection Marie-Thérese et André Jammes Paris 22 March 2002 Lot 582 (proof)
De Andere Fotografie de Geschiedenis van de Fotomechanische Reproductie in de Negentiende Eeuw: tentoonstelling in het Zeeuws Museum Middelburg 1989 (The Other Photography the History of Photomechanical Reproduction in the Nineteenth Century: Exhibition in the Zeeuws Museum Middelburg 1989) Exhibited chk.23
Joseph Negre, Charles Negre, Paviotfoto, Paris, 2013, no. 11
[1] Translated from Van Monckhoven, Basisonderwijs Désiré. Traité Général De Photographie. 2nd ed. Paris: A. Gaudin Et Frere, 1856. p 283
E. Lacan, La Lumiere, October 21, 1854, pg 165-166
Charles Negre, Photographe, Editions des musees nationaux, Paris, 1980, pg 289
Eder History of Photography, pp. 427 -30 Link [Traité Général De Photographie]