Bath's place in the invention of photography and cinema

Nicholas Russell


Region:
South West
Notice Period:
Regular (more than one month's notice)
Type:
Retired Professional
Fee:
Expensed
Category:
Media
Updated:
21st November 2023

Significant developments in both photography and cinematography took place in the around Bath. William Henry Fox Talbot of Laycock Abbey made critical contributions to photography in the mid 19th century, while William Frieze-Greene and John Arthur Roebuck Rudge worked on cinematography in Bath and London in the 1880s and 90s. These efforts both proved to be near misses. The early craft of photography owed more to Louis Daguerre and Frederick Scott Archer, while Edison, the Lumière Brothers and others ultimately perfected moving picture technology. In the half-century between these two innovations, Bath was a significant centre for the professional practice of portrait photography.

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About Nicholas Russell

My working life was spent in colleges and universities. I was a bit of an academic tourist, hopping between applied biology, the history of science and technology and science communication. I also undertook curriculum development in vocational science for the Nuffield Foundation and wrote features in the educational and scientific trade press, and for national newspapers. My final post was Head of the small Humanities Department at Imperial College London.

In retirement i have been an active volunteer in heritage organisations, including for the National Trust at the architect Ernö Goldfinger's house in Hampstead and at Dyrham Park near Bath, at the Blenheim Palace sawmill at Combe near Woodstock in Oxfordshire, and at the American Museum and Gardens at Claverton Manor, just outside Bath.

I have used one of these volunteer roles as a basis for the book, 'Lubetkin and Goldfinger, The Rise and Fall of British High-Rise Council Housing' (2023) and the fact that my father, William Russell, was the designer and inventor at the firm of Russell Hobbs in the history/memoir, 'Household Names, Russell Hobbs and the Automatic Kettle, A Story of Invention and Design' (2021). These topics form the basis of two of my
talks, while others arise from contributions to other projects. More information can be found on my website, nicholasrussell.org.


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