In the beginning...
Amateur Photographer|May 02, 2023
A new book examines the work of photography legend William Henry Fox Talbot. Amy Davies talks to the author Geoffrey Batchen to find out more
Geoffrey Batchen
In the beginning...

If you know even just a smattering of photographic history, you’ll be aware of William Henry Fox Talbot. Generally regarded as the inventor of photography – in British history at least – Fox Talbot was an interesting character. In this new book, compiled from extensive archive material held at Oxford University’s Bodleian Library, we learn that rather than it being a single act in a moment, photography was in fact a medium that Fox Talbot continued to reinvent throughout his life.

The new book, Inventing Photography, takes a look at Talbot’s work, organising it by themes, rather than chronologically, to get a more holistic overview of his motivations – including the competing Daguerreotype process that came out of France at the same time.

To get a better insight into Fox Talbot’s life and work that went into the book, I asked the author, Geoffrey Batchen, Professor of History of Art at the University of Oxford, to explain more.

AP: This is not your first book about Talbot – what about him do you find so interesting?

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