Société française de photographie

Joint exhibition of the Société française de photographie and The Photographic Society of London, South Kensington Museum, 1858

The Société française de photographie (French Photographic Society) is an association, founded on 15 November 1854, devoted to the history of photography. It has a large collection of photographs and old cameras.

Among the founding members were Olympe Aguado, Hippolyte Bayard, Alexandre Edmond Becquerel, Eugène Durieu, Edmond Fierlants, Jean-Baptiste Louis Gros, Gustave Le Gray and Henri Victor Regnault. Henri Victor Regnault was the first president.

History

The Société française de photographie (below, SFP), founded on 15 November 1854, was based on the short-lived Société héliographique (1851) but differed in that it was less elitist and more forward-looking. Some accounts mistakenly link the two organizations more closely, referring simply to a change in the name with a view to giving the SFP the status of the world's oldest photography organization.[1] A careful analysis of the Société héliographique describes in detail how the initial enthusiasm for the organization quickly disappeared resulting in the discontinuation of its activities. The SFP was thus established without any formal connection to the Société héliographique.[2]

The objectives of the SFP were therefore far more commercially oriented and more concerned with future developments, like the Académie des sciences. Its members ambitious amateurs, artists, businessmen and scientists had regular meetings at an established venue, with a written agenda. The objectives were published in a programme and there were regular bulletins. For the remainder of the 19th century, the association was exclusively concerned with improvements to photography. There were regular exhibitions of the members' images, as well as conferences and presentations addressing new techniques, their artistic potential and the latest innovations. The SFP considered itself both an academy of photography and a library of archives. The photographs exhibited were properly archived, together with many comments from the members.

From the beginning of the 20th century, the SFP set itself the task of safeguarding historic works. Today it acts as a research centre on the history and development of photography. Since 1997, it has published the twice-yearly journal Études photographiques with articles on prominent photographers and on the history of photography. The association has a valuable historic collection consisting of some 10,000 images and 50,000 negatives (including 5,000 autochromes. There is also a specialist library with 8,000 books and over 650 journals.

The first president of the SFP was Henri Victor Regnault. Its current president is Paul-Louis Roubert, an art historian specializing in photography who has actively contributed to the association in recent years.[3]

List of presidents

The list of presidents and presidents of honour, published by the association is as follows:[4]

Presidents

Presidents of honour

Henri-Victor Regnault (1810-1878): Founder and president of honor of the SFP

Founding members

Among the SFP's founding members were:

See also

References

This article draws heavily on the French Wikipedia article with the same title.

  1. "Cercles et sociétés photographiques", Musée français de la photographie. (French) Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  2. André Gunthert, "L'institution du photographique: Le roman de la Société héliographique", Etudes photographiques, November 2002. (French). Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  3. André Gunthert, "Paul-Louis Roubert élu maître de conférences à Paris 8", Actualités de la Recherche en histoire visuelle. (French) Retrieved 4 March 2011.
  4. "Le Bureau", Société française de photographie. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  5. "L'Association", Société française de photographie. (French) Retrieved 3 March 2011.

Bibliography

External links

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