Landscape in Madeira, by Sarah Angelina Acland, c.1910 (1)

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Landscape in Madeira, by Sarah Angelina Acland, c.1910 (1)

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Colour Photograph (Autochrome) of a Landscape in Madeira, by Sarah Angelina Acland, c.1910

Sarah Angelina Acland (1849-1930) was a British photographer and a pioneer of early colour photography. Here are some key points about her life and contributions: Sarah Angelina Acland was born in Weymouth, Dorset, England, on 26 June 1849. She was the second daughter of Sir Henry Wentworth Acland, a prominent physician, and Sarah Acland. Acland developed an early interest in photography and began her photographic work in the 1880s. She was a student at the Oxford School of Art, where she learnt the art of photography. She became a member of the Royal Photographic Society in 1892. Acland is best known for her contributions to colour photography. She worked with various photographic processes, including the photochromoscope, a method of producing colour images using a series of coloured filters. Acland worked with her father, Sir Henry Acland, and Professor John Ruskin to develop the photochromoscope. This device was designed to produce high quality colour photographs and played a significant role in the development of colour photography at the time. Acland exhibited her photographs in several exhibitions, including those organized by the Royal Photographic Society. Her work received recognition and praise for its technical innovation and artistic merit. Sarah Angelina Acland never married and dedicated much of her life to her photographic pursuits. She lived in Oxford and continued her involvement in photography until her health began to decline. Sarah Angelina Acland passed away on December 2, 1930, in Oxford, England, at the age of 81. Acland's contributions to color photography and her efforts in developing the Photochromoscope have left a lasting impact on the history of photography. Her work is remembered for its technical innovation and the artistic quality of her images. Sarah Angelina Acland's pioneering work in color photography has secured her a place in the history of photography, and she is recognized for her role in advancing the medium during its early stages.

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Date

1910
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Source

Museum of the History of Science, Oxford
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public domain

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