Stereoscopes talk

Speaker
Denis Pellerin from the Sir Brian May Archive of Stereoscopy
Event date
Event time
14:00 - 15:00
Venue
Ashmolean Museum
Beaumont Street
Oxford
OX1 2PH
Venue details

Headley Lecture Theatre

Event type
Family-friendly
Event cost
£8
Disabled access?
Yes
Booking required
Required

This event is onsite only
It will take place in the Headley Lecture Theatre

Booking is essential
Tickets are £8 to attend

In this fascinating talk with photo historian Denis Pellerin, you'll discover original stereoscopic images from Sir Brian May’s unique collection and see how the Victorians not only hand-tinted photographs but made them 3D.

When photography was revealed to the world in the Victorian era, a lot of people expressed their disappointment at realising that the images from the camera obscura did not reproduce natural colours but looked more like etchings. Hand tinting therefore became very popular until different processes producing true colours were developed.

Similarly, when Sir Charles Wheatstone started using photographs with the device he had invented in 1832, he was not impressed. To create the illusion of the three-dimensionality of natural vision his instrument, the Stereoscope, used two mirrors which made difficult the observation of the very highly polished surface of the first daguerreotypes.

The first teething issues of stereo photography were gradually solved, however, and the craze for stereoscopy started, which saw millions of 3D images produced.

Today these intriguing stereoscopic photographs are collectors' items.