- Arthur Clarence Pillsbury
Arthur Clarence Pillsbury (1870-1946) was a
United States photographer .Pillsbury's career spilled over into nearly every kind of application for photography. His career began in 1895 when as a
student he documented in one hour with 60 different remarkable images the first fraternity rush atStanford University . Pillsbury studiedMechanical Engineering atStanford University and is credited with the invention of a specimen slicer (for microscopy) and a circuit panorama camera before leaving college. [ [http://howtheneoconsstolefreedom.blogspot.com/2006/04/san-francisco-earthquake-and-fire-what.html HOW the NeoCons Stole Freedom: The San Francisco Earthquake and Fire: What one man saw and learned ] ] Two years later he invented the first circuit panoramacamera and soon after took it to theYukon to capture the opening of the mining fields and towns. By 1900 he had photographed most of the notable features of theWestern United States . He used both thepanorama and conventional cameras to capture the panorama images that went around the world in the immediate aftermath of the1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire. He also worked for the "San Francisco Examiner " as aphotojournalist from 1903 to March of 1906.In the aftermath of the earthquake, he began returned to a career as a
landscape photographer when he purchased a studio inYosemite Valley . During this period he also produced art photographs and started using motion picture cameras, producing the first nature films which he showed in Yosemite at his Studio of the Three Arrows. Here is also invented the first lapse-time motion picture camera for the specific purpose of saving the wild flowers of Yosemite that were then threatened with extinction from excessive mowing.His candid photos captured the sense of wonder experienced by people in Yosemite as they saw its natural wonders. His inventions in later life included the microscopic motion picture camera, the X-Ray Motion picture camera and the underwater motion picture camera. His work was done without filters because his background as a photojournalist and his life
philosophy had lead him to the conviction that his job was to produce images and let the viewer bring to that experience the interpretation.Yosemite
He arrived in Yosemite for the first time by bicycle in 1895 while still a student in mechanical engineering at
Stanford University . He had been drawn there by stories from an old friend of his mother'sSusan B. Anthony , who was then making a tour throughCalifornia speaking on the issue ofwomen's suffrage . The young man fell in love with Yosemite and in 1897 bought a studio there. But his young wife refused to spend summers in the wilderness and left him. Despondent, he took his newly finished senior project, the first circuitpanorama camera , and went to the Yukon where he photographed the opening of themining towns and fields.Pillsbury often visited Yosemite after returning to the lower 48 in 1899. There he photographed
John Muir for "Camera Craft Magazine" in 1901,Galen Clark ,George Fiske , andTeddy Roosevelt . These and other photos were later published aspostcard s by thePillsbury Picture Company . Pillsbury had begun producing post cards with his photos as soon as this innovative form of communication was authorized by theUnited States Congress in 1898.In the aftermath of the
1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire, Pillsbury, who had just quit his job as a photojournalist with the "San Francisco Examiner " to found the Pillsbury Picture Company, took the panoramas of the destruction of that great city which flashed around the globe. With the proceeds he was able to fulfill his long time ambition to buy a studio in Yosemite and purchased the Studio of the Three Arrows later that same year. His background inbiology andbotany , encouraged by his parents who were both medical doctors, made him aware of the steady reduction in the number and types ofwild flower s that blossomed in themeadow s there. So in 1912 he built the first lapse-time camera, made the first nature movie showing the lovely dance of aflower raising its face to thesun and managed to persuade theNational Park Service to stop the practice of mowing the meadows to produce fodder for theirhorse s.His specimen cards of flowers, hand tinted at the studio, were as often framed as used in the meadows to identify the many types of plants blooming there. His work in Yosemite included both the classical production photos of such artists as Adams, d'orotones that had the depth and clarity of
hologram s, and his own unique work with flowers and also his candids of the people of Yosemite. That, with his inventions which later included the first microscopic motion picture camera, "Sunset Magazine, May 1927", the X-Ray motion picture camera and the first underwater motion picture camera, "Picturing Miracles of Plant and Animal Life and Popular Science, January 1929", were used on his extensive lecture tours to all the major forums and universities in the United States, England and the South Seas. His many nature films, eventually shown in theaters as well as in schools, clubs and for his lecture tours awakened the public to the need for conservation in the wake of Muir's death in 1914.References
* Melinda Pillsbury-Foster, "A Voice for the Wild Flowers: The Life of Arthur C. Pillsbury", Ship Stone Press, 2005.
* [http://www.yosemite.ca.us/library/handbook_of_yosemite_national_park/photography.html "Photography in Yosemite National Park" by Arthur C. Pillsbury (1921)] in "Handbook of Yosemite National Park".
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