Photographer Emma Powell is the Edge of Humanity Magazine contributor of these ambrotype photographs.  From her project ‘The Impermanence Of Life And Light‘.  To see Emma’s gallery of photographs click on any image.

 

Drift
Drift

 

Beckoning
Beckoning

 

Embrace
Embrace

 

This project is a study of spirits, both ethereal and chemical. Using the  historic wet-plate collodion ambrotype process together with modern digital printing, I create images inspired by nineteenth-century spirit photography. In my photographs I “conjure up” spirits by creating the look of transparent figures. The imperfections of the wet-plate process also add to their otherworldly appearance.

 

Emerge
Emerge

 

Haunted
Haunted

 

Spirit In A Chair
Spirit In A Chair

 

The wet-plate process was invented 1851. The chemicals involved in this process are less sensitive to light than modern films, so the exposure times are much longer. This enables me to produce the effect of transparent spirits by moving during the exposure. I enjoy being part of a tradition in the history of photography, as well as participating in the contemporary interest in historic processes shared by artists today.  

 

Poltergeist
Poltergeist

 

The Dress
The Dress

 

Stepping
Stepping

 

During the mid-nineteenth century, paralleling the first explorations of the photographic medium, a movement developed that focused on belief in the existence of spirits. Photography was used as a scientific means for documenting these spiritualist activities. The experimental nature of these historic photographs mirrors the development of chemical processes. I decided to make spirit photographs, not as a spiritualist believer, but as a photographer exploring the limits of the medium.  Within my work I address issues of permanence—both physical and cultural—age, and death. I use the vaporous properties of the process to create new ghostly meditations on life, light, and the photographic object.

 

Apparition
Apparition

 

Ghost
Ghost

 

Ethereal
Ethereal

 

Myselves
Myselves

 

Window
Window

 

See also:

Offerings

By Emma Powell

 


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