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TAUNTING
THE THAMES
135 YEARS OF CHANGE CAPTURED FOR FIRST TIME
17 September 2007: In The Footsteps
of Henry Taunt, a ground breaking new photography
exhibition that charts the social and environmental
transformation of the Thames over 135 years
through 'then and now' images of the river
and its surrounds, has been announced by
the River & Rowing Museum, (www.rrm.co.uk).
| In the footsteps of
Henry Taunt, The River & Rowing
Museum, Henley on Thames: |
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Exhibition dates:
6 October 2007 - 20 January 2008. Ticket
details below. |
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Press preview:
4 October 2007. Netty Rawlings, Exhibition
Curator, will give a short tour of the
exhibition at 11am. |
The exhibition pairs the finest photographs
by famous Victorian photographer Henry
Taunt together with modern images taken
of the exact same locations along the Thames
by digital photographers Graham Diprose
and Jeff Robins. These 'then and
now' images capture the changing river over
135 years from its source near Coates, a
tiny village in Gloucestershire down to
the Houses of Parliament, London. Taunt's
images were sourced from the archives of
English Heritage (National Monuments Record),
Oxfordshire County Council (Oxfordshire
Studies) and The River & Rowing Museum.
River Thames Revisited, a new book,
accompanies the exhibition. [Details below]
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Taunt is credited with single handedly transforming
the popularity of the Thames during the
Victorian era through his series of photographs,
hand drawn maps and text first created in
1872. His beautiful guide to the Thames
New Map of the River Thames sparked
a national love affair with the river that
remains to this day. The associated tourist
boom radically changed the fortunes of towns
and villages along the riverbank - creating
a landscape and tourist scene still enjoyed
today. Without this burgeoning national
attraction to the Thames, Jerome K Jerome's
Three Men In A Boat and Kenneth Graham's
Wind in The Willows might never have
been written. [Taunt's biography is below].
Taunt's photographs depict an idyllic working
river, with ferrymen, barges and horses
moving people and goods from town to town.
Diprose and Robins' images capture a leisure
based river and with it associated landscape
changes and modern building. One of the
most marked changes is the substantial increase
in trees and riverside vegetation. During
Taunt's time the riverbank would be clear
to enable horses, pulling barges, to move
freely. As the goods moved from river to
road, so the riverbanks returned to their
natural habitat, in some cases trees and
vegetation completely obscuring Taunt's
original view. The modern river is easier
to navigate with more locks and fewer flash
weirs appearing in the photos than Taunt's
pictures.
Netty Rawlings, River & Rowing Museum
Curator, said: "This fascinating
exhibition shows the contemporary use of
photography in both the Victorian era and
modern day. The photographers have used
the cutting edge tools of their trade separated
by 135 years. This unique paring of photographs
powerfully demonstrate the beauty and diversity
of the Thames from source to the Houses
of Parliament, and capture over a century
of life on Britain's favourite river."
Graham Diprose, Photographer and
Lead Photography Tutor, The London College
of Communication said:"One
cannot overestimate the impact Henry Taunt
had on raising the profile of the Thames
and the historical photographic legacy he
has left us. His pictures are not only hugely
technically advanced for his time but also
demonstrate a prodigious talent and awareness
of the medium.
"To take these modern images we've
used the latest digital equipment to create
photographs that will last at least 400
years or more. Together with Taunt's images
we hope our photographs provide a unique
resource and history of the evolving Thames
for generations to come."
River Thames Revisited
The 192 page hardback book of the project
River Thames Revisited is being published
by Frances Lincoln in October 2007 and contains
70 pairs of pictures of the Thames 'then
and now' as well as extracts from Taunt's
Victorian guide book to the river, price
£25 from all good bookshops and the
River & Rowing Museum.
Henry Taunt's Collection: Viewable online
Henry Taunt's collection - over 14,000 images
in all - is now held by the National Monuments
Record, the public archive of English Heritage,
and Oxfordshire County Council's Oxfordshire
Studies service. Taunt's images can be viewed
online at English Heritage's Viewfinder
website -
www.english-heritage.org.uk/viewfinder
and Oxfordshire County Council's website
- www.oxfordshire.gov.uk/heritagesearch
About The Photographers
Henry Taunt: Rags-to-riches
and bankruptcy
On the 14 June 1842, Henry William Taunt
was born into the modest workers dwellings
of Pensons Gardens, St Ebbe's. In 1856 he
joined the staff of Edward Bracher, one
of Oxford's very few photographers, as a
general utility hand. Over Christmas 1859
he made a solitary trip up river to Cricklade
and back in an out-rigged dinghy. The river
was in flood, yet here was the moment of
inspiration for all the maps, guides, albums
and books that were to follow.
The first edition of Taunt's 'New Map
of the River Thames' first appeared
in 1872. The books must have been difficult
to produce, the river was hand coloured
in blue on every one of the 33 maps and
each tiny photograph was pasted into position
individually. Map pages and printed text
then had to be bound together. However it
was an immediate success. As sales of the
"Illustrated Map of the Thames",
various bespoke albums, pamphlets and postcards
soared, and so began the Victorian love
affair with the River.
A magazine called Home Chimes began to serialise
an amusing story of the Thames in August
1888 and the book version of Jerome K. Jerome's
'Three Men in a Boat' was published a year
later.
In 1893, Henry Taunt was elected as a Fellow
of the Royal Geographical Society. This
was a considerable honour, no doubt, in
recognition of the remarkable feat of cartography
and accuracy of measurements that featured
in the 'New Map of the Thames'.
Disaster struck in 1894, when the lease
came up on his Head Quarters shop at 10
& 11 Broad Street, Oxford and a verbal
agreement was not honoured. Taunt was forced
to file for bankruptcy. A few months later,
he was discharged and began to work on new
ideas for further books and guides documenting
many of the surrounding counties of Southern
England. Production was only halted by the
First World War and by 1918 Taunt, now an
old man of 76, was left with very little
help. He died on 4 November 1922. Many of
his glass negatives were smashed up while
others were cleaned off for use as greenhouse
glass. Fortunately E.E. Skuce, who was the
Oxford City Librarian wasted little time
in acquiring thousands of surviving negatives,
prints and papers. The glass negatives were
later transferred to what is now the National
Monuments Record while Oxford retained Taunt's
original prints.
Graham Diprose
Graham Diprose is lead Tutor in Photography
in the School of Graphic Design, at the
London College of Communication, the largest
college in The University of the Arts, London.
Having spent many years as an advertising
photographer, he now works with undergraduate
and postgraduate students developing skills
in all areas of applied and experimental
digital and craft photography. He worked
with two colleagues and the Museum of London,
to remake a ten mile panorama of both banks
of the River Thames from London Bridge to
Greenwich that mirrored an original commissioned
by the Port of London Authority in 1937.
It was exhibited in City Hall in the centre
of London in 2004 and more recently at the
River & Rowing Museum in autumn 2005.
A 180 page book of the project, 'London`s
Riverscape - Lost and Found' with a forward
by Ken Livingstone, Mayor of London, has
sold its entire print run of 5000 copies.
Jeff Robins
Jeff Robins is a professional photographer
with extensive experience of working in
the advertising and marketing domain and
as a lecturer and consultant to the profession,
on digital imaging. His clients have included
Nationwide Building Society, British Telecom,
Hasbro and Bernard Matthews, along with
various design, marketing and advertising
agencies. A strong interest in computer
technology made it easier for Jeff to embrace
the new digital imaging techniques as they
developed. Today Jeff teaches alongside
Graham on postgraduate courses in digital
image-making at the University and is Course
Director of a very intensive "Launch
your Career in Photography" course,
run by Artscom, in the college's professional
training area.
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Exhibition Dates and Touring information
In the Footsteps of Henry Taunt will
open at the River & Rowing Museum (Kirkham
Gallery), Henley on Thames, on 6 October
2007 to 20 January 2008 and will then travel
to Reading Museum from 26 January 2008 to
26 April 2008. The exhibition will then
tour museums and galleries around the UK.
Further information:
Kallaway Limited
(www.kallaway.co.uk)
Will Kallaway
T: +44 (0)20 7221 7883,
E: will.kallaway@kallaway.co.uk
Jo Williamson
T: +44 (0)20 7221 7883,
E: jo.williamson@kallaway.co.uk
Pictures
The River & Rowing Museum media centre,
with all press release and a wide selection
of images for download can be found at:
http://www.kallaway.co.uk/rrm.htm
Notes to Editors and Public Information
The River & Rowing Museum attracts over
90,000 visitors a year and celebrates three
themes:
The
past, present and future of the River Thames;
The
historic riverside community of Henley on
Thames;
The
international sport of rowing.
These themes are explored through a wide
variety of exhibitions and events across
four galleries and special exhibitions.
One the Museum's major success has been
The Wind in the Willows exhibition which
recreates the timeless E H Shepard illustrations
from Kenneth Grahame's famous novel.
Since opening in August 1998 the Museum
has received numerous awards for its design
and architecture, including the National
Heritage/NPI Museum of the Year award. The
River & Rowing Museum is part of the
Thames Valley Museums Group (TVMG) Family
Friendly initiative - a scheme which brings
together 29 museums across Berkshire, Oxfordshire
and Buckinghamshire, to promote their popular
appeal to the whole family
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Address
The River & Rowing Museum,
Mills Meadows,
Henley on Thames,
Oxfordshire,
RG9 1BF.
Tel. 01491 415600.
Web: www.rrm.co.uk |
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The museum, terrace café
and shop is open every day from 10am
- 5.30pm in summer and 10am - 5pm in
the winter |
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Paid for tickets are valid
for re-entry to the museum for 12 months
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Admission for The Wind
in the Willows including the Galleries:
£7 for adults,
£5 for children and
£6 for senior citizens and concessions
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Admission for the Museum
Galleries:
£3.50 for adults,
£2.50 for children and
£3 for senior citizens and concessions
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Free parking for visitors
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The National Monuments
Record
The National Monuments Record (NMR) is the
public archive of English Heritage. The
archive holds over 10 million historic photographs,
architectural and archaeological reports,
plans and other items related to the historic
environment of England.
For more details and information on Viewfinder
and the Henry Taunt collection please visit
www.english-heritage.org.uk/Viewfinder
For more information on the National Monuments
Record please visit
www.english-heritage.org.uk/NMR
or call 01793 414600.
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