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Find: New articles Process step-by-step Working practicesPlatinum Palladium Printing. - Roots that bare many Branches?Eric Neilsen gives us a brief history of Platinum Palladium Printing and explains how it has branched out.There has been a large growth in the field of print making using platinum and palladium since the early 1980's. And over that time we have been witness to a radical change in the practices of platinum and palladium printing. However, if you missed the beginning of the revival you could benefit from a quick history lesson. If we were to look at the process as a tree, I believe that we would begin to see some intricate branching emerge from one main root that dates back to at least 1886. The preface to the Platinotype by Captain Pizzighelli and Baron Von Hubl which was released in 1886 and translated by J.F. Iselin, MA., Edited by W. DE W. Abney begins. The growing popularity of the Platinotype process has induced the Council of the Photographic Society of Great Britain to authorize a reprint of the translation of the brochure by Captain Pizzighelli and Baron Von Hubl, which appeared in the Photographic Journal in 1883 The copy that I have is included in a four-part book
For much of the time proceeding 1970, there were a very small number of people printing in the noble metals of platinum and palladium. However, as a result of a growth spurt in much of photography toward non-traditional image creation, more people had found the fertile land of platinum and palladium waiting to be planted with seeds of creative invention. During this period, a network of printers emerged that produced an interest and excitement for the craft of image creation with these noble metals. These included Irving Penn, Tom Millea, George Tice and Nancy Rexroth. For some, this emerging renaissance of platinum printing afforded them new jewels to sell, other were interested in seeing what this medium could provide to there artistic tool box, some had historical curiosity, and yet others simply saw this as an opportunity to make a profit by supplying the needs a growing niche in photography. I had studied several years of photography and had decided to take a break from formal education while I worked with still and moving pictures. It was through this path that I came to platinum printing. I took a job as an assistant to a Silicon Valley executive Chuck Henningsen. He had a nice darkroom in a second home next to his main house where we made mostly silver gelatin prints. One of the journeys in photography that he had started before I became his assistant was that of platinum printing. I had only heard of it and had no idea how it was done. Several months after working with limited access to help, we made a trip to Monterey, CA where we met Tom Millea. He practiced what I'd call a traditional approach to platinum printing; Ferric Oxalate (A) + Ferric Oxalate (B - with potassium chlorate added) with a nearly equal amount of Platinum and/or Palladium salts. For years, Tom was my main source of information when I would run across a problem with the process. However, in addition to Tom there was a supplier that we began to buy our ferric oxalate from in Southern California, Bostick and Sullivan. Eventually, Chuck wanted to begin to make 24x30 prints in platinum, even though we had only previously made 8x10's. With no one to guide me, I began trying to make a variety of papers work for Chuck. After many tries, it soon became easy to coat a 24x30 platinum print. In 1990 we relocated to Taos, NM and the process began all over. The traditional method that we worked with is a develop-out method (DOP - Develop Out Print), and I could see changes in image depth from our California images to the New Mexico images.
It was also back in 1994 that the Internet was beginning to catch on big. It provided printers from all over the world an opportunity to exchange ideas from the comfort of their own offices and studios. The alternative process newsgroup brought together a much larger collection of artist and educators. The feeling of isolation of the early 80's was now very distant and many new practitioners of noble printing had a vast network of helping hands. There have been many workshops over the last decade that have included platinum workshops as part of their course offerings. I have seen both traditional methods as well as those based in the use of POP platinum prints. Besides the internet and workshops, there are several books that cover platinum printing and some of those cover it exclusively. Dick Arentz and Luis Nadeau both have books out that exclusively cover platinum/palladium printing. There are several alternative process printing books that include a chapter on platinum/palladium printing, most notably The Keepers of Light. All of these have without a doubt helped self-starters to learn the process.
There are other processes that share a common ancestry with platinum/palladium printing; Kallitype, Vandyke and a modern printing method the Chrysotype. These other printing methods are distinct trees but live in the same countryside as the Noble prints of platinum and palladium. Some have described photography as an opposite to sculpture, in that we start with nothing and make something to fill the frame with our selective vision rather than slowly remove from an existing structure. Although, that should be the last aspect of this art form as well. Email this article to a friend
UK/Europe: Buy'Platinum and Palladium Printing' from Amazon.co.uk USA: Buy 'Platinum and Palladium Printing' from Amazon.com
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