![Gertrude Käsebier :: Portrait of Evelyn Nesbit (Miss N.). Published in Camera Work, Nº 1, 1903. Portrait of Evelyn Nesbit [three-quarter length portrait, seated, wearing an off-the-shoulder dress], 1902. The Toledo Museum of Art | src NYTimes Lens Journal](https://unregardoblique.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/tumblr_pctxijdvx01rp66ruo1_1280.jpg)
![Gertrude Käsebier (1852-1934) :: [Evelyn Nesbit about 1900 at a time when she was brought to the studio by Stanford White] Evelyn Nesbit, three-quarter length portrait, seated, wearing an off-the-shoulder dress. Glass negative. | src Library of Congress](https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52157663063_19b8a604b3_o.png)
![Gertrude Käsebier (1852–1934) :: Evelyn Nesbit, 1902 [Carbon print?]. | src Princeton University Art Museum](https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52156641737_cf6781edbc_o.jpg)

![Gertrude Käsebier [Des Moines, Iowa, USA, 1852 - New York, USA, 1934] :: Portrait (Miss N.). From: Camera Work No. 1, January 1903. Date: 1898 (circa) / Printed circa 1903. Technique: Photogravure on Japanese paper. | src Museo de Arte Reina Sofía](https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52158329585_5d98ae81e4_o.jpg)
images that haunt us
![Gertrude Käsebier :: Portrait of Evelyn Nesbit (Miss N.). Published in Camera Work, Nº 1, 1903. Portrait of Evelyn Nesbit [three-quarter length portrait, seated, wearing an off-the-shoulder dress], 1902. The Toledo Museum of Art | src NYTimes Lens Journal](https://unregardoblique.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/tumblr_pctxijdvx01rp66ruo1_1280.jpg)
![Gertrude Käsebier (1852-1934) :: [Evelyn Nesbit about 1900 at a time when she was brought to the studio by Stanford White] Evelyn Nesbit, three-quarter length portrait, seated, wearing an off-the-shoulder dress. Glass negative. | src Library of Congress](https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52157663063_19b8a604b3_o.png)
![Gertrude Käsebier (1852–1934) :: Evelyn Nesbit, 1902 [Carbon print?]. | src Princeton University Art Museum](https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52156641737_cf6781edbc_o.jpg)

![Gertrude Käsebier [Des Moines, Iowa, USA, 1852 - New York, USA, 1934] :: Portrait (Miss N.). From: Camera Work No. 1, January 1903. Date: 1898 (circa) / Printed circa 1903. Technique: Photogravure on Japanese paper. | src Museo de Arte Reina Sofía](https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52158329585_5d98ae81e4_o.jpg)


This experimental proof is a fine example of the capacity of Talbot’s “photoglyphic engraving” to produce photographic results that could be printed on a press, using printer’s ink-a more permanent process than photographs made with light and chemicals. Like Talbot’s earliest photographic examples, the image here was photographically transferred to the copper engraving plate by laying the seeds directly on the photosensitized plate and exposing it to light, without the aid of a camera. Equally reminiscent of Talbot’s early experiments, this image is part of Talbot’s lifelong effort to apply his various photographic inventions to the field of botany. In a letter tipped into the Bertoloni Album, Talbot wrote, “Je crois que ce nouvel art de mon invention sera d’un grand secours aux Botanistes” (“I think that my newly invented art will be a great help to botanists”). Such uses were still prominent in Talbot’s thinking years later when developing his photogravure process; he noted in 1863 that “if this art [of photoglyphic engraving] had been invented a hundred years ago, it would have been very useful during the infancy of botany.” Had early botanists been able to print fifty copies of each engraving, he continued, and had they sent them to distant colleagues, “it would have greatly aided modern botanists in determining the plants intended by those authors, whose descriptions are frequently so incorrect that they are like so many enigmas, and have proved a hindrance and not an advantage to science.” [quoted from The Met]

Inscription on verso, by unknown hand in graphite: Woman with Chrystal Globe (Study of Mrs. White) about 1905.

