BEDFORD, Francis
The British photographer Francis Bedford (1816-1894) was the son of an eminent architect. He started his career as draughtsman and lithographer, and showed his work in group exhibitions already in 1833. By 1850 he had become well-known for his coloured lithographs of architectural subjects. Around 1852, Bedford took up photography, with the initial aim of enriching his knowledge and enhancing his technique in lithography. In 1853 he became co-founder of the Royal Photographic Society. At that time, photography was becoming indispensable to several fields of knowledge. Archaeologits, architects, naturalists, geologists, anthropologists and art historians documented their studies with photographic shots.
In 1854 Queen Victoria and Prince Albert asked Bedford to photograph works of art from their collection. In the following year, Bedford showed these photographs in the annual exhibition, together with his landscape pictures. In 1857 he accompanied the royal family of Britain as their personal photographer. Already renowned as one of the best landscape photographers, he travelled and took pictures all over Britain.
In 1862 Bedford was chosen as one of the eight personal escorts of Prince Albert in the latter's tour of the Eastern Mediterranean (Egypt, the Holy Land, Turkey and Greece). During the tour, he took two hundred and ten shots, several of which were engraved in wood and published in the "Illustrated London News” and later in an Album. Bedford continued to travel and take photographs in Wales and England until 1884. He took part in international exhibitions in his homeland and other European countries, and was a member of the board of the Royal Photographic Society.
During his journey to the Middle East, Bedford was the first to photograph monuments and ancient ruins of the area. His pictures of the Druze-Maronite massacre (1862) spurred the public's interest in the events and people of the East. Today, the photographs of his album are very much sought-after in international auctions.
Written by Ioli Vingopoulou
BEDFORD, Francis - Egypt
-
The Pyramids of Giza necropolis. In the foregroun,d the Prince of Wales visiting the site.
-
Fountain of the inner court of the mosque of Sultan Hassan, Cairo.
-
The façade of the Ptolemaic temple dedicated to the god Horus at Apollonopolis Magna (Edfu), Egypt.
-
The colossal statues of Amenophis III (Colossi of Memno) at Thebes, Egypt.
-
The colonnade of the temple of Luxor (Thebes) with the colossal statues of Ramesses II.
BEDFORD, Francis - Rest Images
-
Ruins of modern settlement in the vicinity of the ancient city of Bethoron.
-
View of the settlement of Al-Jib (ancient Gibeon) in Palestine.
-
View of Jerusalem from the Mount of Olives. In the background the mosque of Dome of the Rock.
-
The “spring minbar” of the mosque of Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem (Mamluk period).
-
The Mount of Olives as seen from the mosque of Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem.
-
The Garden of Gethsemane at the feet of Mount of Olives, Jerusalem.
-
The monuments known as tombs of Josaphat, Absalom and Zechariah at Kidron Valley, Jerusalem.
-
The Shepherds' Field at the village of Beit Sahur outside Bethlehem.
-
Manuscript of the Samaritan Pentateuch photographed by the author at Nablus, probably Abisha scroll.
-
Remains of Roman temple at the village of Deir al-Ashayer, Syria.
-
The Straight Street (Via Recta) of Damascus, built in the Roman era.
-
On the left, the temple of Zeus. On the right, the temple of Bacchus.
-
Ruins of the temple of Zeus (foreground) and of Bacchus (middleground), at Baalbek, Lebanon.
-
The Fountain of Sultan Ahmed III on the entrance of Top Kapi Palace, Istanbul.
-
Temple of Olympian Zeus, Athens. In the background, the Acropolis.