Sea belt
1843-1851
Anna Atkins (1799 - 1871, British) , Botanist
RCN9352
height (print): 250mm
width (print): 195mm
width (print): 195mm
Study of marine algae Sea belt (here styled here Laminaria saccharina). This depicts a thick, long and rounded blade with stipe and holdfast.
Inscribed in ink beneath the image with the name of the specimen ‘Laminaria saccharina’ in Atkins's handwriting.
Blueprint from Photographs of British algae: cyanotype impressions, by Anna Atkins, volume one (London, 1843).
Anna Atkins (1799- 1871) was a British botanist.
The original purpose of Anna Atkins’ Photographs of British Algae was to provide illustration for William Harvey’s FRS (1811-1866) A manual of British marine algae (1841). It was privately printed by Atkins and is considered the first scientific manual to be printed using photography to replace conventional means of illustration.
Photographs of British Algae was issued as a part book to various scientific institutions, and Atkins made fifteen part donations to the Royal Society between October 1843 and the end of 1853. The thirteenth donation is listed in the Philosophical Transactions presents register from November 1850-June 1851 as ‘Volume I’ and came with instructions that the plates therein where to be combined with certain from the earlier twelve parts, and any leftover were to be reserved for volumes still to come – volumes II and III.
It was up to the Royal Society to bind the cyanotypes according to Atkins' instructions. The final result is a 3 volume series containing 425 plates, and an additional gathering of 7 plates, believed to have been sent in to the Society as replacements but never incorporated.
Photographs of British Algae was issued as a part book to various scientific institutions, and Atkins made fifteen part donations to the Royal Society between October 1843 and the end of 1853. The thirteenth donation is listed in the Philosophical Transactions presents register from November 1850-June 1851 as ‘Volume I’ and came with instructions that the plates therein where to be combined with certain from the earlier twelve parts, and any leftover were to be reserved for volumes still to come – volumes II and III.
It was up to the Royal Society to bind the cyanotypes according to Atkins' instructions. The final result is a 3 volume series containing 425 plates, and an additional gathering of 7 plates, believed to have been sent in to the Society as replacements but never incorporated.