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["Jones Wood" townhouses, East 65th and East 66th Streets between Lexington and Third Avenues, New York, New York. North terrace fountain]

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Summary

Site History. House Architecture: Twelve townhouses designed by John B. Snook, 1868, and remodeled by Edward Shepard Hewitt and William Emerson, 1919. Landscape: Edward Shepard Hewitt and William Emerson. Other: Originally known as "Gerry Gardens." Today: Extant.

Slide for lecturing on city and suburban gardens.

On slide: Blue star sticker and red seal sticker.

Title, date, and subject information provided by Sam Watters, 2011.

Forms part of: Garden and historic house lecture series in the Frances Benjamin Johnston Collection (Library of Congress).

Published in Gardens for a Beautiful America / Sam Watters. New York: Acanthus Press, 2012. Plate 164.

The lantern slides first produced for the 17th century's “magic lantern” devices. The magic lantern, also known by its Latin name Lanterna Magica, an image projector that used pictures on transparent plates (usually made of glass), one or more lenses, and a light source, used for entertainment. The earliest slides for magic lanterns consisted of hand-painted images on glass, made to amuse their audiences. After the invention of photography, lantern slides began to be produced photographically as black-and-white positive images, created with the wet collodion or a dry gelatine process. Photographic slides were made from a base piece of glass, with the emulsion (photo) on it, then a matte over that, and then a top piece of a cover glass. Sometimes, colors have been added by hand, tinting the images. Lantern slides created a new way to view photography: the projection of the magic lantern allowed for a large audience. Photographic lantern slides reached the peak of their popularity during the first third of the 20th century impacting the development of animation as well as visual-based education.

Frances Benjamin Johnston (1864-1952) was an American photographer who is best known for her pioneering work in the field of architectural and landscape photography. She was born in Grafton, West Virginia, and after studying art and photography in Paris, she returned to the United States and established herself as a successful photographer. Johnston's work focused primarily on architecture, and she photographed many of the most significant buildings and structures of her time. She also photographed landscapes, gardens, and people, and her work often appeared in magazines such as House Beautiful, Ladies' Home Journal, and Country Life. One of Johnston's most notable projects was her documentation of historic architecture in the American South. In 1933, she was commissioned by the Carnegie Corporation to photograph historic homes and buildings in Virginia, Maryland, and North Carolina. This work resulted in a series of photographs that are now housed in the Library of Congress. Throughout her career, Johnston was also an advocate for women in photography, and she worked to promote the work of other women photographers. She was a founding member of the Women's Professional Photographers' Association and the Photo-Secession, a group of photographers who sought to elevate photography as an art form.

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gardens new york fountains children lantern slides hand colored jones wood jones wood townhouses streets lexington avenues third avenues terrace fountain johnston frances benjamin collection frances benjamin johnston photo north terrace fountain ultra high resolution high resolution park garden parks library of congress new york city
date_range

Date

01/01/1921
person

Contributors

Johnston, Frances Benjamin, 1864-1952, photographer
collections

in collections

Lantern Slides

Magic Lantern

Frances Benjamin Johnston 1864-1952

American photographer who is best known for her pioneering work in the field of architectural and landscape photography.
place

Location

create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

http://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions on publication.

label_outline Explore Third Avenues, Fountain, Townhouses

Dams under construction. Watts Bar Dam, shown here under construction, has a semi-outdoors type powerhouse with an enormous gantry crane (to the right of the picture) for installation and removal of units. The project is further distinguished by a control building which is entirely removed from the hydro plant, being located some 120 feet higher on top of a steep cliff and with direct connection to the switchyard behind. The windowless left wing of the control building houses the control room; the tower-like structure in the back accomodates air conditioning, restrooms, etc. The glass wall, upper level, contains the reception room with a broad semi-circular overlook terrace, the story below the terrace devoted to offices

South Wilmington Causeway Bridge, Spanning Conrail Railroad on Market Street, South Wilmington, New Castle County, DE

Colonel William Oliver Anderson House, Civil War Battle of Lexington State Park, Lexington, Lafayette County, MO

St. Aloysius Academy, Tile Plant Road at Thorn Road, New Lexington, Perry County, OH

Lindenwold, Gatehouse, 701 Bethlehem Pike & Lindenwold Terrace, Ambler, Montgomery County, PA

St. Aloysius Academy, Tile Plant Road at Thorn Road, New Lexington, Perry County, OH

North Sixth Street (Houses), Harrisburg, Dauphin County, PA

Claremont High School Historic District, Roughly bounded by Fifth & Third Avenues, Third Street, Second Avenue, & North Center Street, Hickory, Catawba County, NC

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Breard, residence at 4650 Meadowood Rd., Dallas, Texas. Sharp terrace

["El Fureidis," James Waldron Gillespie house, Parra Grande Lane, Montecito, California. Terrace with ocean view]

Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence W. Miller, residence in Nantucket, Massachusetts. Terrace view to beach

Taking burley tobacco in from the fields after it has been cut to dry and cure in the barn. On Russell Spear's farm near Lexington, Kentucky

Topics

gardens new york fountains children lantern slides hand colored jones wood jones wood townhouses streets lexington avenues third avenues terrace fountain johnston frances benjamin collection frances benjamin johnston photo north terrace fountain ultra high resolution high resolution park garden parks library of congress new york city