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Lot Number
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204
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Author
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TRIPE, LINNAEUS.
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Title
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VIEWS OF BURMA.
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Year Published
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1855
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Description
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(NEGATIVES MADE AUGUST-NOVEMBER 1855; PRINTED JANUARYNOVEMBER 1856) 134 albumen prints from waxed paper negatives (average 267 x 345mm., or the reverse), including two 2-part folding panoramas (252 x 584mm.), nearly all signed by Tripe in the lower right corner of the image in ink, individually mounted on card (447 x 578mm.), preserved loose (as issued) in the original presentation portfolio of blue half morocco gilt over marbled boards, upper cover titled in gilt "Photographic Memorial of the Embassy to Amarapoora in 1855," occasional light spotting to mounts and to a few images, two portfolio flaps detached, binding rubbed
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Lot Note
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The earliest photographs made of sites in Burma outside of Rangoon. A unique set of 134 photographs, specially made by Tripe for presentation to the 1st Marquess of Dalhousie, the Governor General of India who sent Tripe to Burma as part of the diplomatic mission. This is the largest single set of Views of Burma that Tripe made and includes 18 prints not issued with the later sets of 120 prints. This set includes 13 unique prints, of which 2 are previously unknown images. In April 1855 the 1st Marquess of Dalhousie, the Governor-General of India, recommended that a political trip to Amerapoora (Amarapura), Burma, take place following the annexation of Pengu (Bago), part of Burma, by the British after the 1852 Anglo-Burmese war. Colesworthy Grant, a Calcutta artist, was due to accompany the group, but it was decided that a photographer should also go, as photography was considered a more suitable material for accurate documentation, and Grant was not skilled in photography. The Court of Directors in London drew up an 1855 directive claiming 'photography as a means by which representations may be obtained of scenes and buildings, with the advantages of perfect accuracy, small expenditure of time, and moderate cash'. They asked that photography be the main means of recording architecture and so Lord Dalhousie appointed Tripe as an "Artist in Photography" to accompany the delegation. Between August and November 1855 Tripe photographed the architecture and landscape of Prome, Thayet Myo, Yenan- gyoung, Tantabeng, Pugahm Myo, Tsagain Myo, Ava, Amerapoora, Mengoon and Rangoon. These were the first photographs Tripe took on behalf of the British government and transformed his skills from a highly competent amateur into a professional photographer. 'By the time he had returned to Bangalore at the end of his three month trip he had made more than 200 negatives under testing circumstances of climate and location, as well as of his own photographic naïvety. His surviving negatives bear witness to difficulties with overexposure and wayward chemicals.' (Taylor, p.130). Tripe's Views of Burma were well received and in 1856 he was appointed as official photographer to the Madras Presidency. 'Few photographers in the calotype era came close to matching the sustained output of [McCosh, Murray and Tripe], and in visual sensitivity and technical bravado they remain unequalled.' (Taylor, p.131) For additional images and information see www.sothebys.com
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Provenance
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Presented by the photographer to James Broun-Ramsay, 1st Marquess of Dalhousie (1812-1860), Governor-General of India (1848-1856); thence by descent to the present owner LITERATURE Dewan, J. The Photographs of Linnaeus Tripe. A Catalogue Raisonné. (Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario, 2003); Taylor, R. Impressed by Light: British Photographs from Paper Negatives, 1840-1860 (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; National Gallery of Art, Washington; Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 2007)
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Estimated Price
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GBP 200,000.00 - 300,000.00( USD 302000.00 - USD 453000.00)
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Actual Price
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GBP 241,250.00 ( USD 364287.50)
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