The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Photograph­y ‘a tool for science’

From galloping horses to the first child born under anaesthesi­a, science and photograph­y is the focus of the 2019 St Andrews Photograph­y Festival, which runs until October 27

- MICHAEL ALEXANDER www.standrewsp­hotography­festival.com

The strong links between St Andrews and the early pioneers of photograph­y have been well documented by the St Andrews Photograph­y Festival since its launch in 2016.

Now, as the fourth annual festival gets under way at venues across the town organised by St Andrews University Library Special Collection­s Division and supported by the local St Andrews BID business initiative, the focus turns to the centuries-old links between science and photograph­y.

“The idea for the theme this year comes from the basis of photograph­y first being discovered by scientists and being used by scientists early on and experiment­ed with – particular­ly here in St Andrews,” said Rachel Nordstrom, photograph­ic collection manager at St Andrews University.

“The nature of photograph­y in its beginning is that it did require a very scientific­ally focused mind to wrap your head around the chemistry of photograph­y. But since its conception, it has been used regularly as a tool for science and visualisat­ion.”

An example that will be on display at the Byre Theatre is a series of Horse in Motion cabinet cards by Eadweard Muybridge.

Muybridge shot the photograph­s in June 1878 and was the first person to prove, through photograph­y, that when horses gallop all four feet leave the ground.

Elsewhere, the railings along The Scores will feature images of Periodic Tables. This is the Internatio­nal Year of the Periodic Table with the St Andrews University special collection actually including

the oldest published periodic table in the world.

Also featured will be some early photograph­y of the moon – or at least attempts to recreate the moon using plastic moulds.

Contempora­ry artists Gair Dunlop from Dundee and Sean Dooley from the East Neuk are also featured, while there’s another interestin­g local connection with a portrait of a Cupar girl who was the first in the country to be born by a mother who was given anaesthesi­a during childbirth.

The exhibition also includes a project called Every Day Climate Change.

“It was an Instagram initiative that’s been going on for a few years whereby photograph­ers tag images that represent climate change and represent ways to tackle it.

“Exhibition­s

Exhibition­s will show how science has inspired photograph­ers to create art

will show how photograph­y evolved with the help of scientific advancemen­ts, how photograph­y is used as a vital tool in various fields of science, and how science has inspired photograph­ers to create art,” said Rachel.

“The festival will run throughout the month of October in various indoor and outdoor venues around St Andrews, including The Scores, St Salvators Quad, The Byre Theatre and Martyrs Kirk.

“We will also host a science-discovery trail, Time-laps, around the centre of town where visitors can discover stories of scientific innovation, noteworthy events and interestin­g personalit­ies, all illustrate­d photograph­ically.

“Events will include a film presentati­on in partnershi­p with the School of Film Studies, the first mercurybas­ed daguerreot­ype workshop held in Scotland and some child-friendly events hosted at the Bell Pettigrew Museum.

“We have a line-up of speakers talking about everything from photograph­s as scientific objects to early advancemen­ts in photograph­y and applicatio­ns of historic processes – the chemical aspects of photograph­y.

“We are a university so pulling in that academic side of things is also a focus for us.”

 ??  ?? Life through a lens: Some of the items that will be on display at the fourth annual St Andrews Photograph­y Festival, which takes place this month.
Life through a lens: Some of the items that will be on display at the fourth annual St Andrews Photograph­y Festival, which takes place this month.
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 ?? Pictures: St Andrews University Library. ??
Pictures: St Andrews University Library.
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