Artwork Page for Arch in Farmyard, Swansea

Details / Information for Arch in Farmyard, Swansea

Arch in Farmyard, Swansea

1845
(British, 1804–1877)
Measurements
Image: 23.2 x 18.7 cm (9 1/8 x 7 3/8 in.); Matted: 50.8 x 40.6 cm (20 x 16 in.)
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Educated as a mathematician, musician, and clergyman, Jones was an accomplished daguerreotypist before he was introduced to the calotype by William Henry Fox Talbot in 1845. Jones's pictures were taken primarily in Wales, England, Ireland, and the Mediterranean and often depicted complex compositions of ruins, landscape, and rustic architecture. To provide a sense of scale and human presence, he almost always included figures in his architectural views (here a lone individual leans against the archway). In this photograph Jones also alluded to the inevitable passage of time by contrasting the monumental arch in the foreground with the ruined arch in the distance.
A vertically oriented gold-toned salted paper print depicts a man in a dark coat and cap leaning against a large stone archway. The man stands in shadow to our right, head tilted down against the inner wall. Through the arch, which has circular carvings on either side, a sunlit courtyard reveals a building and a smaller stone arch. Deep shadows and highlights shade the scene. Uneven ground extends across the foreground.

Arch in Farmyard, Swansea

1845

Calvert Richard Jones

(British, 1804–1877)
England, 19th century

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