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From Commercial Art by the Art Training Institute, Melbourne. Date and designer unknown.

Jon Gnagy (1907 – 1981) broke everything into four shapes: a ball, a cone, a cube, and a cylinder He said if you could draw those shapes, you could draw anything.

 

-- Thaddeus Seymour,

Jon Gnagy's son-in-law

--------

 

My sister, Eileen, watched

Gnagy's "Learn to Draw" on TV.

Description: Although Thomas Smillie, the Smithsonian's first photographer and curator of photography, used images to catalog much of the institution's physical object collection, he also extensively photographed pages of books on topics of personal interest to him as a way of copying the material for future use. Smillie also photographed letters and documents as a method of preserving the Smithsonian's records.

 

Creator/Photographer: Thomas Smillie

Birth Date: 1843

Death Date: 1917

 

Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1843, Thomas William Smillie immigrated to the United States with his family when he five years old. After studying chemistry and medicine at Georgetown University, he took a job as a photographer at the Smithsonian Institution, where he stayed for nearly fifty years until his death in 1917. Smillie's duties and accomplishments at the Smithsonian were vast: he documented important events and research trips, photographed the museum's installations and specimens, created reproductions for use as printing illustrations, performed chemical experiments for Smithsonian scientific researchers, and later acted as the head and curator of the photography lab. Smillie's documentation of each Smithsonian exhibition and installation resulted in an informal record of all of the institution's art and artifacts. In 1913 Smillie mounted an exhibition on the history of photography to showcase the remarkable advancements that had been made in the field but which he feared had already been forgotten.

 

Medium: Cyanotype

 

Culture: American

 

Date: 1890

 

Repository: Smithsonian Institution Archives

 

Collection: Thomas Smillie Collection (Record Unit 95) - Thomas Smillie served as the first official photographer for the Smithsonian Institution from 1870 until his death in 1917. As head of the photography lab as well as its curator, he was responsible for photographing all of the exhibits, objects, and expeditions, leaving an informal record of early Smithsonian collections.

 

Accession number: RU95_Box76_032

All you need are pencils and paper... and a little time...

Find out more here: www.ukartholidays.co.uk/

 

From Commercial Art by the Art Training Institute, Melbourne. Date and designer unknown.

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