A single glass plate negative formerly in the collection of Howard Carter (most famously the excavator of Tutankhamun’s tomb) and now in the archives of the Griffith Institute, Oxford University raises a number of questions about photography, archaeological practice, and the creation and use of excavation archives. By following this negative, known as Negative VIII, on five of its trajectories through time, media, and space, I argue that the reproducibility of the photographic image creates a distinct set of issues within archaeology, which has preferred to emphasise photography as a unique record of the destructive excavation process. Tracing the genealogy of a photographic image (rather than the biography of a singular photograph) allows ...
Ancient art cut into rock is difficult to research and manage off-site without precise three-dimensi...
For seven years, Ingelevics travelled to museums in Europe and North America, sifting through hundre...
Book synopsis: Does a photograph freeze a moment of time? What does it mean to treat a photographic ...
From the late nineteenth century, photography was inseparable from archaeological fieldwork, and obj...
Photographing archaeological labour was routine on Egyptian and other Middle Eastern sites during th...
Book synopsis: This is the first volume to explore the place of photography in archaeology: the para...
In August of 1985 the Special Collections Department of the William R. Pullen Library at Georgia Sta...
Archaeology and photography has a long, co-constructed history that has increasingly come under scru...
The authors disentangle the fascinating tale of the investigations in Kent's Cavern, iconic site for...
In archaeology, photography is mainly used as a technique for gathering data and evidence. Within th...
This paper describes how the University of Auckland’s unique and valuable Anthropology Photographic ...
They are among the most famous and compelling photographs ever made in archaeology: Howard Carter kn...
The first documented photographs in America were taken in the spring of 1839 by enthusiastic experim...
Over the past few years I have been engaged in writing a cultural history of photography, to be publ...
The Research Photographs collections consist of unique photographic and textual documentation genera...
Ancient art cut into rock is difficult to research and manage off-site without precise three-dimensi...
For seven years, Ingelevics travelled to museums in Europe and North America, sifting through hundre...
Book synopsis: Does a photograph freeze a moment of time? What does it mean to treat a photographic ...
From the late nineteenth century, photography was inseparable from archaeological fieldwork, and obj...
Photographing archaeological labour was routine on Egyptian and other Middle Eastern sites during th...
Book synopsis: This is the first volume to explore the place of photography in archaeology: the para...
In August of 1985 the Special Collections Department of the William R. Pullen Library at Georgia Sta...
Archaeology and photography has a long, co-constructed history that has increasingly come under scru...
The authors disentangle the fascinating tale of the investigations in Kent's Cavern, iconic site for...
In archaeology, photography is mainly used as a technique for gathering data and evidence. Within th...
This paper describes how the University of Auckland’s unique and valuable Anthropology Photographic ...
They are among the most famous and compelling photographs ever made in archaeology: Howard Carter kn...
The first documented photographs in America were taken in the spring of 1839 by enthusiastic experim...
Over the past few years I have been engaged in writing a cultural history of photography, to be publ...
The Research Photographs collections consist of unique photographic and textual documentation genera...
Ancient art cut into rock is difficult to research and manage off-site without precise three-dimensi...
For seven years, Ingelevics travelled to museums in Europe and North America, sifting through hundre...
Book synopsis: Does a photograph freeze a moment of time? What does it mean to treat a photographic ...