Dr. Edward Christian Arning, a gifted amateur photographer, was born in Manchester England in 1855 and died in Munich in 1936. He was the son of a German merchant who had settled in England. Arning is considered the first microbiologist in Hawaii and he pioneered work on Leprosy.
A fascinating account of his life can be found online at the Mamiya Medical Heritage Center, Hawaii Medical Library in Honolulu, HI.(1)
First published in Vienna in 1887, Photographische Rundschau was among the earliest journals created for amateur photographers. It quickly became a leading international forum for pictorialism—the movement that championed photography as an art form on par with painting. Under editors such as Ernst Juhl and Dr. Richard Neuhauss, the journal promoted a new aesthetic vision and introduced readers to the work of groundbreaking photographers, including the young American Edward Steichen.
A hallmark of the Rundschau was its lavish use of photogravure. From the mid-1890s onward, each issue featured a large photogravure plate, printed with exceptional craftsmanship. These spare-no-expense hand-pulled photogravures allowed readers to experience photographs of the highest richness and subtlety, advancing their artistic value.
Across its shifting formats and editors, Photographische Rundschau documented photography’s transformation at the turn of the twentieth century, when questions of art, science, and modern life were vigorously debated. Today it stands as a crucial record of photography’s rise as a creative practice as well as a powerful advocate for photography’s recognition as an art.
Photographische Rundschau 1900, March: Plate X
1. Photoseed.com