795 Views
14
View In My Room
Photography, Black & White on Glass
Size: 23.6 W x 23.6 H x 0.1 D in
Ships in a Tube
795 Views
14
Artist featured in a collection
My artworks are created through a very old photographic process named “Wet Plate Photography”, this process was invented around 1850. The process starts off with cutting glass (I use the sizes 5x7”, 7x7” and 8x10”), then the glass plate is covered with Collodion (a mix of gun cotton, alcohol and ether). The glass plate is now ready to go into the silverbath to make it sensitive for light. The plate is placed in an old wooden cassette and put into the camera, now you shoot your composition. After exposing, the glass plate gets developed, fixed and cleaned by water. After this old process, I scan the glass plate with a high-resolution professional scanner, and it’s ready to be printed on a substrate. The size for this Artwork is 60 x 60 cm, including a white border of 5 cm. From this "WetPlate" original there will only 10 prints available, further; 10 in the size, 80 x 80 cm 5 in the size, 100 x 100 cm They are all numbered, signed and come with a Certificate of Authenticity.
2015
Black & White on Glass
10
23.6 W x 23.6 H x 0.1 D in
Not Framed
Not applicable
Ships Rolled in a Tube
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Ships rolled in a tube. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.
Netherlands.
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Netherlands
Photography has always been Peters’ great passion, mostly in working as a lecturer and for big companies (e.g. Rijksmuseum, Amazon). He made a career in photography for many years, analogue and digital. Peter came at a point where he couldn’t feel the excitement and creativity anymore and decided to leave the corporate world in 2014 to fulfil his lifelong ambition to work from his heart and soul, not in assignment anymore. The opportunity came along to buy an old post office (in Olst, the Netherlands). He converted the monument (1879) to a gallery, studio and a home. Peter wanted to work with his hands again (he needed to feel the materials). He was always attracted to the old wooden cameras and historic photographic processes. He bought a big 8”x8” wooden camera and started experimenting with the wet plate collodion process. With this he could go back to the basis of photography. “The wet plate process is exciting and full of surprises. You only have one prepared wet plate and one chance to get it right. Think ahead about composition, light, time and aperture. It all comes together in one unique moment. This magic moment happens sometimes and then a one-of-a-kind photo develops in front of your eyes!” It was soul satisfying to work with this process. It gave meaning to the material he used; he could lose himself for days in creating images. After developing, his collaboration with artisans trying out different techniques to choose the best way to print, was a big part of the creative process. Peters’ work has been featured in national and international magazines, books and newspapers. He took part in international exhibitions. His biggest professional achievement was winning the Sony World Photography Awards, Fine Art, 2021. He sadly passed away October 27th 2022. Information about Peter can be obtained through , his partner.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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