Henry Peach Robinson was one of the originators of photomontage, a technique he called "combination printing." Trained as a painter, he exhibited his most famous photograph, "Fading Away," in 1858. This was a deathbed scene of a young woman, made from combining five separate negatives. Robinson published eleven books on photography and numerous magazine articles. The journal Photo Eramemorialized him by saying "In England and on the continent, for nearly half a century (1857 to 1900) no single influence has been greater than his in shaping the progress of pictorial work..." In a more recent appraisal, the photographic historian Robert A. Sobieszek called Robinson "perhaps the most influential voice in nineteenth century photography. No other photographer so consistently produced major works of art, was bestowed with so many commendations and medals, and was so much a proselytizer of a coherent theory of photographic art."
There were technical reasons for producing images from multiple negatives; the materials in use during most of the nineteenth century could not record detail in the sky of a landscape without underexposing the rest of the picture, and it could be difficult to keep all parts of a large image such as the one shown in focus at the same time. For figures in a landscape, a subject favoured by Robinson, there were other advantages to photographing models in the studio: "The light is more unmanageable out of doors," he wrote, "and the difficulty arising from the effect of wind on the dress is very serious."




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