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for WILLIAM E. DASSONVILLE
WILLIAM E. DASSONVILLE
1879 - 1957
In 1906 the San Francisco earthquake destroyed William Dassonville's studio, but fortunately some of his work survived. He continued to do portrait work and other various assignments to earn a living while still creating his artwork, mainly platinum prints of landscapes in the pictorialist tradition. Over the years he built quite a name for himself as a portrait photographer and maintained a very active exhibition schedule. With the onset of World War One, there was a shortage of platinum printing paper. William Dassonville did research to develop an alternative paper coating. By 1923 he was coating high quality paper with a new silver bromide emulsion that had the tonal intricacy of platinum. He called his paper "Charcoal Black" and it was heralded by Ansel Adams, Imogene Cunningham and many others.
http://www.leegallery.com/william-dassonville/william-dassonville-biography, accessed on 3/26/12
Entered by Kirsten Weber, curatorial assistant, 3/27/2012
Person TypeIndividual