Anna Atkins

Women in STEM
Women in STEM
Anna Atkins
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Birth: March 16, 1799

Death: June 9, 1871

Specialty: Botany

Major Contributions:

Created more cyanotypes of more than 400 types of algae

Published first book illustrated with photographs

Member of Botanical Society of London

Image: Wikimedia


Today, we’re used to scientific texts being illustrated with detailed photography. But in 1843, a publication by photographer and botanist Anna Atkins was the first book illustrated with photographic images.

Born in 1799, her mother passed away the next year, and Anna grew up very close to her father, scientist John George Children. Her father allowed her an “unusually scientific education for a woman” and even used her engravings of shells for his translated publication of the Genera of Shells.

She married in 1825, and moved to Halstead Place in Kent, where she collected dried plants and began to experiment with photograms. Through her father and husband’s connections, she met photography pioneers William Henry Fox Talbot and Sir John Herschel who taught her their techniques.

Herschel invented the cyanotype, a process that uses ammonium iron citrate and potassium ferricyanide to produce a cyan-blue image and was primarily used for reproducing blueprints.

Atkins adapted the technique by placing algae and seaweed on the treated paper. She self-published Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions in 1843. In the introduction, she stated that “the difficulty of making accurate drawings of objects as minute as many of the algae and confera has induced me to avail myself of Sir John Herschel’s beautiful process of cyanotype, to obtain impression of the plants themselves.” 

She later produced two more volumes in the series, which contained 424 cyanotype photograms in total. In order to create multiple identical prints, Atkins developed a process of arranging her specimens on sheets of glass. This enabled her to create by some estimates at least 5,000 original prints on hand coated paper.

Cyanotypes are difficult to preserve and very few copies of her books survive, with the British Library and the New York Public Library providing scans on their websites. Atkins also published books of non-photographic work before her death in 1871 at the age of 72.

Written by Mary Ratliff

Sources:

Wikipedia: Anna Atkins

Science Friday: Botanicals in Blue: A Victorian Woman’s Take on Algae

Captured Shadows by Les Rudnik

Wikipedia: Cyanotype

The New York Public Library Digital Collections: Photographs of British Algae

See Also:

Treasures of the New York Public Library: Beautiful Impressions: Anna Atkin’s British Algae

The J. Paul Getty Museum: Anna Atkins

The Public Domain Review: Cyanotypes of British Algae by Anna Atkins

Open Culture: The First Photo-Illustrated Book, Anna Atkins’ Austerely Beautiful Photographs of British Algae

Full Stop: Art & Algae: The Work of Anna Atkins

Wikipedia: John George Children