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Dr Kelley Wilder

Job: Professor

Faculty: Arts, Design and Humanities

School/department: School of Arts, Design and Architecture

Research group(s): Photographic History Research Centre (PHRC)

Address: Ƶ, The Gateway, Leicester, LE1 9BH

T: N/A

E: kwilder@dmu.ac.uk

W: /phrc

Social Media:

 

Personal profile

Professor Kelley Wilder is a photographic historian, with interests in the cultures of science and knowledge generated by photography and photographic practice.  In her work Kelley  considers the photographic practices of nineteenth century scientists and artists like William Henry Fox Talbot, Sir John Herschel, Henri Becquerel and others. New projects include work on Photographic catalogues and archives, and nineteenth and twentieth century material cultures of photographic industry.

Research group affiliations

Publications and outputs


  • dc.title: Photographic Networks in the Venus Transit dc.contributor.author: Wilder, Kelley

  • dc.title: Photology, Photography, and Actinochemistry: The Photographic Work of John Herschel dc.contributor.author: Wilder, Kelley dc.description.abstract: John Herschel published at least nine important articles on photographic chemistry between 1819 and 1858. He introduced hyposulphite as a fixer and seven new imaging processes, among them the Cyanotype or, as it became commonly known, the blueprint. He produced negatives on glass, anticipating the breakout innovation of the 1850s by a decade. He is well known for popularizing important vocabulary like “photography,” “snapshot,” “negative,” and “positive,” and he was instrumental in supporting a thriving network of individuals now considered photographic pioneers. This chapter demonstrates how Herschel's contribution to photochemistry should be evaluated outside of photographic history, and how it relates to the growing field of industrial chemistry in the nineteenth century. dc.description: Photographic History Research Centre

  • dc.title: Photographs as Bureaucracy in the Business of Photography dc.contributor.author: Wilder, Kelley

  • dc.title: Photographs, Science, and the Expanded Notebook dc.contributor.author: Wilder, Kelley dc.description.abstract: Notebooks are a critical part of observational and experimental practices in the lab and the field, and they appear in all disciplines of science, humanities, and the arts. In photographic history, notebooks by wellknown experimenters like William Henry Fox Talbot and John Frederick William Herschel have been critical to understanding how photography was developed. But in spite of their ubiquitous presence and critical place in photographic history, very little attention has been given to understanding the effects of photography on the notebooks, or to the photographic patterning of scientific notetaking. This article is about photographic notebooks and the way in which photography insinuated itself into the working practice of a few scientists, creating a new and hybrid ‘expanded notebook’.

  • dc.title: Touring Nature dc.contributor.author: Wilder, Kelley dc.description.abstract: In the first decades of the Twentieth century, a vibrant network of both people and institutions, amateurs and professionals, scientists and businessmen engaged with science photography through popular science, tourism, exhibition, and publication. Science photographs were studied, exchanged, collected, published, bought, and sold in a well-established industry of science imaging. This short exhibition catalogue essay traces a small part of this industry through the Herzog collection. Exhibition Kunstmuseum Basel, July 2020- October 2020.

  • dc.title: By the Light of the Moon dc.contributor.author: Wilder, Kelley dc.description: This chapter is part of the exhibition catalogue for the Royal Greenwich Museums exhibition 2019.

  • dc.title: Stereo Atlases as Hybrid Knowledge dc.contributor.author: Wilder, Kelley dc.description.abstract: This paper examines the nature of knowledge generated by the use of stereo images in scientific atlases. Taking both photography and drawing to be stereo imaging methods in the sciences, it contends that it is not only photography we should pay attention to. Market factors in the production of stereo atlases, the complicit introspection required of stereo atlas users, and the control exerted by the authors of stereo images combined to create a unique sort of hybrid knowledge.

  • dc.title: Flash! A Literary and Visual Culture of Performative Technology dc.contributor.author: Wilder, Kelley dc.description.abstract: In Flash! Photography, Writing, & Surprising Illumination Kate Flint presents a technology history in the fullness of its literary and visual culture as it plays out over more than a century. Her narrative is not about inventions, firsts or the sort of exceptionalism of individual geniuses that often populate the stories of photography or photographically related technology. It is instead about presenting the technological, literary and visual cultures of the flash as mutually productive, inseparable entities. dc.description: Roundtable article The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.

  • dc.title: Science, Art and the Business of Color dc.contributor.author: Wilder, Kelley

  • dc.title: Through the Looking-Glass: Hans Danuser’s 'Last Analogue Photograph' dc.contributor.author: Wilder, Kelley

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Research interests/expertise

material cultures of photography

photography and science

archives, catalogues and photograpy

photography, industry and technology

Areas of teaching

  • Photographic history
  • Photography and industry
  • Photographic research practices
  • Material histories of photography
  • Science and Photography
  • History of Technology

Qualifications

D.Phil., Oxford University 2003

Honours and awards

 


 

Membership of external committees

Advisory Board, Studies in Theory and History of Photography, University of Zurich

 

Membership of professional associations and societies

 European Society of the History of Photography 

 History of Science Society

 European Society for the History of Science

 

Projects

2020-2023      Mercator Fellow, University of Regensburg, Germany. DFG project, "Astronomie-Glasarchiv: Fotografische Praktiken in der Sternwarte, 1850-1950" (The ), PI Professor Omar Nasim, Regensburg.

2019-2022      Research Fellow of the Science Museum, London

2019-2020      Marie Curie EU Training Grant (€84,497) ‘Photomechanical Reproduction in Europe’ with Dr. Petra Trnkova, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague

2017-2018      M3C Creative Economy Engagement Postdoctoral funding (£29,741) for ‘Pictures in Natural Collections’, with Damian Hughes and the Natural History Museum, London

2016-2017      HEIF Network fund 'The Meaning of Photographic Materials' (£3000)

2016-2017       British Academy Research Grant for project 'Doing Science in a Photographic Age' (£6,635)

Forthcoming events

Recent research outputs

2021    (Forthcoming, in press) Wilder, K. ‘Stereo Atlases as Hybrid Knowledge’ in Stefanie Klamm et al., Hybrid Photography (Bloomsbury Press).

2020    Wilder, K., ‘Science, Art and the Business of Color’, in Bettina Gockel (ed.) The Colors of Photography, (Berlin: de Gruyter Press), 307-325.

2019    Wilder, K. ‘The Two Cultures of Word and Image: On Materiality and the Photographic Catalog’, in Julia Bärnighausen, et al. (eds.) On the Materiality of Photographs and Photo-Archives in the Humanities and Sciences, (Open Editions, Max Plank Institute, Berlin), 263-273.

Journal of Victorian Culture, Volume 23, Issue 4, 28 September (2018) 503–507.

Key articles information


Current research students

  • Ella Ravilious 'Photographic Collecting Practices of the National Art Library' CDA with Victoria and Albert Museum
  • Erika Lederman  'Women Photographers and the South Kensington Museum' CDA with Victoria and Albert Museum
  • Valentine Nyamdon 'Manufacturing a Subversive Reality: Backdrops and Photographic Manipulations in Cameroonian studio Photography'
  • Rose Teanby 'Early women photographers and the influence of common law 1839-1861'
  • Peter Cheese 'From Silver to Silicon'
  • Francesca Strobino 'Investigating Talbot's Experiments in Photomechanical Printing'

Externally funded research grants information

2020-2023      Mercator Fellow, University of Regensburg, Germany. DFG project, "Astronomie-Glasarchiv: Fotografische Praktiken in der Sternwarte, 1850-1950" (The Astronomical Glass Archive: Photographic practices of the Observatory 1850-1950), PI Professor Omar Nasim, Regensburg.

2019-2022      Research Fellow of the Science Museum, London

2019-2020      Marie Curie EU Training Grant (€84,497) ‘Photomechanical Reproduction in Europe’ with Petra Trnkova, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague

2017-2018      M3C Creative Economy Engagement Postdoctoral funding (£29,741) for ‘Pictures in Natural Collections’, with Damian Hughes and the Natural History Museum, London

2016-2017       British Academy Research Grant for project 'Doing Science in a Photographic Age' (£6,635)

Internally funded research project information

2016-2017      HEIF Network fund 'The Meaning of Photographic Materials' (£3000)

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