Walter B. Woodbury

Walter Bentley Woodbury (26 June 1834 – 5 September 1885) was an inventor and pioneering English photographer. He was one of the earliest photographers in Australia and the Dutch East Indies (now part of Indonesia). He also patented numerous inventions relating to various aspects of photography, his best-known innovation being the woodburytype photomechanical process.

The Haven Canal, Batavia, c. 1870. Albumen silver print.

Early years

Walter B. Woodbury was born in Manchester, England on 26 June 1834.[1][lower-alpha 1] As a student of a civil engineer in Manchester he constructed his own camera obscuras from cigar boxes and eyeglass lenses.[2]

Photography in Australia, the Far East, Java and London

In 1851 Woodbury, who had already become a professional photographer, went to Australia and soon found work in the engineering department of the Melbourne waterworks. He photographed the construction of ducts and other waterworks as well as various buildings in Melbourne. He received a medal for his photography in 1854.[3][2]

At some point in the mid-1850s Woodbury met expatriate British photographer James Page. In 1857 the two left Melbourne and moved to Batavia (now Jakarta), Dutch East Indies, arriving 18 May 1857, and established the partnership of Woodbury & Page that same year.[4][lower-alpha 2]

Tea factory interior. Preanger, Java, mid-1860s. Albumen silver print.

During most of 1858 Woodbury & Page photographed in Central and East Java, producing large views of the ruined temples near Surakarta, amongst other subjects, before 1 September of that year.[4] After their tour of Java, by 8 December 1858 Woodbury and Page had returned to Batavia.[4]

In 1859 Woodbury returned to England to arrange a regular supplier of photographic materials for his photographic studio and he contracted the London firm Negretti and Zambra to market Woodbury & Page photographs in England.[5]

Woodbury returned to Java in 1860 and during most of that year travelled with Page through Central and West Java along with Walter's brother, Henry James Woodbury (born 1836 – died 1873), who had arrived in Batavia in April 1859.[4]

On 18 March 1861 Woodbury & Page moved to new premises, also in Batavia, and the studio was renamed Photographisch Atelier van Walter Woodbury, also known as Atelier Woodbury. The firm sold portraits, views of Java, stereographs, cameras, lenses, photographic chemicals and other photographic supplies. These premises continued to be used until 1908, when the firm was dissolved.[4]

In his career Woodbury produced topographic, ethnographic and especially portrait photographs. He photographed in Australia, Java, Sumatra, Borneo and London.[4][6][3] Although individual photographers were rarely identified on Woodbury & Page photographs, between 1861 and 1862 Walter B. Woodbury occasionally stamped the mounts of his photographs: "Photographed by Walter Woodbury, Java".[4]

Return to England and further endeavours

In late January or early February 1863, Woodbury left Java to return to England, because of ill health.[4][7][lower-alpha 3][lower-alpha 4]

Having returned to England, Woodbury invented the Woodburytype photomechanical reproduction process, which he patented in 1864.[5][7][8][lower-alpha 5] Between 1864 and 1885 Woodbury took out more than 30 patents in Britain and abroad for inventions relating to balloon photography, transparencies, sensitised films and improvements in optical lanterns and stereoscopy.[2][3] In addition to his inventions, Woodbury produced photographs documenting London's poor.[3]

In 1865 his Woodburytype process was bought by the Photo Relief Company, then bought by the Woodbury Permanent Photographic Printing Company and then bought by a succession of other companies in Britain and elsewhere.[2]

Death and memorial

Walter B. Woodbury died on 5 September 1885[4] while on holiday in Margate, England. He was buried at Abney Park Cemetery in Stoke Newington, close to London, where his family memorial stands to this day.

gollark: ?coliru```c#include <stdio.h>#define S2(x) #x#define A2(x, ...) x(x(__VA_ARGS__))#define R2(x) x x#define R4(x) A2(R2, x)#define R8(x) A2(R4, x)#define R16(x) A2(R8, x)#define S(x) A2(S2, A2(S2, x))#define QUITELONG R16(long)int main(){printf(S(QUITELONG));return 42;}```
gollark: ?coliru```c#include <stdio.h>#define S2(x) #x#define A2(x, ...) x(x(__VA_ARGS__))#define R2(x) x x#define R4(x) A2(R2, x)#define R8(x) A2(R4, x)#define R16(x) A2(R8, x)#define S(x) A2(S2, x)#define QUITELONG R16(long)int main(){printf(S(QUITELONG));return 42;}```
gollark: Example?
gollark: ... how?
gollark: Hey, it's consistent.

References

  1. Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA). "Woodbury, Walter B. (PH1985:0426:006)". Archived from the original on 12 March 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  2. Auer, Michèle, and Michel Auer. Encyclopédie internationale des photographes de 1839 à nos jours/Photographers Encyclopaedia International 1839 to the Present(Hermance: Editions Camera Obscura, 1985)}}
  3. Browne, Turner, and Elaine Partnow. Macmillan Biographical Encyclopedia of Photographic Artists & Innovators (New York: Macmillan, 1983), 676–677.
  4. Merrillees, Scott. Batavia in Nineteenth Century Photographs (Richmond, England: Curzon Press, 2000), 256-260.
  5. Bloom, John. "Woodbury and Page: Photographers of the Old Order". In Toward Independence: A Century of Indonesia Photographed (San Francisco: The Friends of Photography, 1991), 29–30.
  6. Edwards, Gary. International Guide to Nineteenth-Century Photographers and Their Works (Boston: G.K. Hall, 1988), 581–582.
  7. Ovenden, Richard. John Thomson (1837–1921): Photographer (Edinburgh: National Library of Scotland, The Stationery Office, 1997), 35–36, 216.
  8. Rosenblum, Naomi. A World History of Photography (New York: Abbeville Press, 1984), 34, 197–198.

Notes

    1. Anglo-American Name Authority File
    2. Bloom gives the date of their arrival in Batavia as the Fall of 1856
    3. Bloom gives the date of his return as 1862, Bloom, 30
    4. Auer and Auer give the date as 1864
    5. Auer and Auer give the date 1866

      Further reading

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