Magnolia Branch with Four Flowers
After X-rays were discovered in 1895, they soon came to be applied in photography. X-radiographs made visible what was concealed to the human eye. They served primarily useful purposes, such as revealing fractures. This photograph, however, was probably taken simply for its sheer beauty. The petals hardly absorbed the X-rays, which is why they look so transparent and ethereal in the photograph.
Udgiver
- Rijksmuseum
Emne
- http://iconclass.org/25G41
Type af genstand
- photograph
- gelatin silver print
- Fotografi
- Gelatine Sølvtryk
Udgiver
- Rijksmuseum
Emne
- http://iconclass.org/25G41
Type af genstand
- photograph
- gelatin silver print
- Fotografi
- Gelatine Sølvtryk
Ejerinstiution
Aggregator
Rettigheder for medierne i denne optagelse (medmindre andet er angivet)
- http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/
- http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/
Rettigheder
- Public Domain
- Publiek Domein
Oprettelsesdato
- 1910 - 1925
- 1910/1925
- 1910/1925
Sted-tid
- first quarter 20st century
Steder
- United States of America
- Verenigde Staten van Amerika
- urn:rijksmuseum:thesaurus:RM0001.THESAU.162
- USA
Identifikator
- http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.359163
- RP-F-1999-138
Omfang
- height 249 mm
- width 291 mm
- height 278 mm
- width 354 mm
Format
- photographic paper
Sprog
- nl
Er en del af
- collectie: foto's
Leverende land
- Netherlands
Navn på samling
Første gang offentliggjort på Europeana
- 2014-05-27T14:36:28.977Z
Sidste gang opdateret fra den ejerinstiution
- 2018-03-17T13:16:42.033Z