Jump to content

James Graham (photographer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Graham
Born1806
Died1869 (aged 62–63)
NationalityScottish
Known forPhotographs of Jerusalem

James Graham (1806–1869) was a Scottish photographer who took some of the earliest images of the Holy Land, where he was sent as lay secretary for the London Society for Promoting Christianity Amongst the Jews.[1]: 605  [2]

Graham, a former director of a Glasgow bank, having learnt the basics of photography, arrived in Jerusalem in December 1853 and stayed there for two-and-a-half years, taking lodgings in a tower on the Mount of Olives. While there he was visited by artists including Thomas Seddon and William Holman Hunt, both of whom seem to have used his photographs as reference material for their paintings.[3]

When he exhibited photographs, he would often write an appropriate quotation from the Bible on the mount[clarification needed].[3]

During his time in Jerusalem he taught photography to the Russian-born Mendel John Diness, who had been converted from Judaism, and baptised in 1849 by the British consul James Finn, as found in "Palestine and Egypt Under the Ottomans" By Hisham Khatib.[4]

He was the author of a pamphlet called Jerusalem; its Missions, Schools, Converts etc. under Bishop Gobat published in London in 1858.[5]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-century Photography at Google Books
  2. ^ "Picturing Jerusalem, James Graham and Mendel Diness, photographers", ed. Nissan N. Perez, Israel Museum, 2007, ISBN 978-9652783523.
  3. ^ a b Staley and Newell 2004, p.117
  4. ^ Hisham, Khatib (2003). Palestine and Egypt Under the Ottomans: Paintings, Books, Photographs, Maps and Manuscripts. I.B. Taurus. p. 233. ISBN 9781860648885.
  5. ^ Graham, James (1858). Jerusalem; its Missions, Schools, Converts etc. sender Bishop Gobat.

Sources

[edit]
  • Staley, Allen; Newall, Christopher (2004). Pre-Rapaelite Vision:Truth to Nature. London: The Tate Gallery.