Label Text: Poling the Marsh Hay is one photograph from the series Life and Landscape on the Norfolk Broads, a seminal work in the history of photography. The Norfolk Broads were a network of freshwater lakes and rivers on the east coast of England. Wild, remote, and long protected from industrialization, the region rapidly transformed with the introduction of railway travel in the 1880s. As tourism and technology overthrew the old agrarian economy and way of life, Peter Henry Emerson sought to document with his camera what he saw as a disappearing world.
Influenced by Whistler’s art and aesthetics, Emerson believed that photography should spring from the direct observation of nature. Based on this principle, Emerson revolutionized photography with a movement known as Naturalism. While it was standard practice at the time for photographers to manipulate negatives in the darkroom in order to compose their images, Naturalism maintained that the photograph should show a one-to-one equivalent of what existed in front of the camera. To this end, Emerson developed techniques for attaining realistic effects with the camera itself.
One such technique, evident in Poling the Marsh Hay, is called differential focus. Like Whistler, Emerson subscribed to optical theories arguing that the human eye cannot focus on near and far objects simultaneously. Differential focus allowed Emerson to achieve a combination of sharp and soft focus effects within the same image, creating a naturalistic depiction of space as seen by the human eye.
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