Powerhouse Museum Collection Search 2.5
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Photographic Equipment > Lenses

+ H10253 Portrait lens (Anastigmat No. 225...
+ H10285 Optical equipment, telescope lens...
+ H10291 Optical equipment, lens, concave,...
+ H10339 Lens, single reflex, plastic and ...
+ H10449 Lens, camera, wide angle, brass b...
+ H10453 Specimen lens, showing lens manuf...
+ H10454 Lens with panoptic shuttter, symm...
+ H10457 Camera accessories, 'Planescope' ...
+ H10502 Lens, convex, wood and glass, H W...
+ K1080 Television camera lens, 25" televi...
+ 2007/173/2 Condenser lens, metal / wood ...
+ 2007/191/3 Projector lenses (14), metal ...
+ 97/92/14-2 Camera lens and cap, wood / b...
+ 97/92/14-4 Camera lens and lens cap, bra...
+ 97/92/14-5 Camera lens and lens cap, bra...
+ 93/195/1 Camera lens, Aviar anastigmat, ...
+ 93/196/1 Camera lens, metal/glass, Dallm...
+ 93/201/4 Camera lens and lens cap, Sonna...
+ 85/490 Photographic lens, Taylor, Taylor...
+ 85/535 Optical equipment, plano-convex l...
+ 94/67/1 Intra-ocular lens and packaging,...
+ 94/67/2 Intra-ocular lens and packaging,...
+ 94/67/3 Intra-ocular lens and packaging,...
+ 86/4130 Tooth Collection: Eye Lenses (11...
+ 86/4131 Tooth Collection: Eye Lenses & c...
+ 86/4132 Tooth Collection: Eye Lenses & c...
+ 2004/114/3 Camera lens, designed and bui...
+ 86/812D Contact Lenses (3) in glass bott...
+ 87/1012 Lens, glass, metal-mounted, [Aus...
+ 87/1199 Pair of Irlen lenses, Sydney Col...
+ H3350 Five samples of optical glass....
+ H3351 Part of an exhibit of optical glas...
+ H4406 Torch lens, plastic, made by the C...
+ H4715 Lenses (2), polymethyl methacrylat...
+ H4747 Plastic lenses (5), unknown materi...
+ 87/849 Contact lenses (3), 1987...
+ 87/850 Contact lenses (3), 1987...
+ 87/854 Intraocular lenses (5), 1987...
+ H5226 CORNEAL LENSES, acrylic, samples f...
+ H5879 1 Lens with fitted aperture openin...
+ 96/248/1 Set of optometrist's trial glas...
+ H6724 Microscope, binocular, in case, wi...
+ H7055 Single landscape lens, focal lengt...
+ 96/86/2 Movie camera, lenses (8), cinema...
+ H7464 Collection of optical plastics as ...
+ H7874 Adjustable landscape lens. de M.L....
+ H8218 1 spectacle lens made of plastic (...
+ H8219 1 spectacle lens made of plastic (...
+ H8220 1 spectacle lens made of plastic (...



2002/4/11 Lenses and accessories (17), plastic/ leather/ glass/ metal, used at Max Dupain Studios, Sydney, made by Carl Zeiss/ CP Goerz/ Ross/ Kodak/ Schneider-Kreuznach, USA/ Germany/ England, [1940-1980]

No image is publicly available for this object.

Because of the age of the Museum's collection some objects in the Museum's collection have not yet been digitised. Some images are not available for Copyright reasons.

Max Dupain is considered Australia's most celebrated twentieth century photographer. Some of the material comprising this transfer was used in the production of commercial and personal photographs at the studios of Max Dupain from the c1930 until c1950.
Other photographic material, included in this transfer from the Macleay museum, is known to have been owned and used by Max Dupain's father and as such may be evidence of the influence Max father's facination and involvement with images may have had on the young Dupain.
Other material includes early cameras most likely used by Max as a hobbyist photographer.
Much of the material from Max Dupain may be considered significant on various
grounds:
The material positively identified as being used in the practice of commercial photography by Max Dupain and associates (by David Moore) is significant in that it is representative of studio and dark room equipment used in the production of commercial photography.
The lighting equipment - flash bulbs, flash stands and studio lights - are examples of early artificial light technologies.
Max Dupain established studios in Bond Street, Sydney in 1933. From all accounts it was a prosporous commercial practice and Dupain worked in a variety of areas including fashion, celebrity and illustrative photography. At this time Dupain also produced modernist studies, nudes and beach shots. Some of the material in this acquisition has been identified as in use at the 49 Clarence Street studios which were occupied by Max Dupain and his associates around 1940.
For more detail regarding the use and significance of identified items please refer to the transcriptions of David Moore and Jean Blundell (nee Cazneaux) available on the blue file.
Max Dupain's aesthetic innovations in an Australian Context:
Max commenced his apprenticeship in the studios of Cecil Bostock (1930) at a time when most commercial and art Australian photography (apart from photo journalism / documentary) continued to molify the other arts, in particular in the style of the pictorialist romanticism.
Max was greatly influenced by the work of Man Ray and the photographic work coming from the innovative German Bauhaus school during the Weimar Republic heyday (1927-1933).
Max was very impressed by the Neue Sachlich keit (new matter-of-factness) of the German photographers and seduced by the ideologies of this new style gleaned from translations. In particular the writings of GH Saxon Mills had left their mark. Quoting from Mills in his own essays:
"Photography belongs to the new age, its forms are mechanistic rather than naturalistic. It is part and parcel of the terrific and thrilling panorama opening out before us today of clean concrete buildings, steel radio masts, and the wings of the airliner. But its beauty is only for those who, themselves, are aware of the zeitgest - who belong conciously and proudly to this age, and have not their eyes fixed wistfully on the past".
Max brought the surreal nature, lines and contrast of the these practitioners to commercial clients in Sydney. Max's style helped the transformation of photography into a form of its own in Australia. It has been claimed that Max Dupain's work from the mid-1930s formed " . . . the first body of images in Australian photography to express seriously a modern aesthetic."
The material that makes up this acquisition includes items owned and used by Max Dupain's father. This film and magic lantern equiment dates from 1880-1920 and includes an early hand wound 35mm motion picture camera.
The photographic equipment from Max's studio is representative of early commercial photography and includes items used to produce early artificial light photography.
Max Dupain's work has been well documented in several published volumes.
The documentation recieved from the Macleay Museum includes descriptions, valuations, condition and some provenance information.
The collection of material has been examined by David Moore (present at the Max Dupain studios from 1948-1951 & 1958-1959) and Jean Cazeneaux (). Transcriptions of these peoples recollections are on the blue file.
Many thousands of lens designs have been produced. Constant improvements include - increased appeture, wider field angle, and extended performance.
Used at the studios of Max Dupain
Owned by the Studios of Max Dupain

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Description
Lenses and accessories (17), plastic/ leather/ glass/ metal, used at Max Dupain Studios, Sydney, made by Carl Zeiss/ CP Goerz/ Ross/ Kodak/ Schneider-Kreuznach, USA/ Germany/ England, [1940-1980]

Enlarging lens: Componon 1:5.6/105 7443470 Schneider-Kreuznach. (91/014/0016)

Enlarging lens: Componar 1:4.5/105 4630679 Schneider-Kreuznach. (91/014/0017)

Enlarging lens: Dogmar 1:4.5 F=21cm 517550 D.R.P. C.P. Goerz Berlin. (91/014/0018)

Enlarging lens: brass bound "Anastigmat 1:7.2 F-22cmm (sic?) D.R.P. 56109 Carl Zeiss, Jena, No.9279". (91/014/0019)

"Aldis-Butcher Projection Lens 8 Inch Focus No.143183." (91/014/0020)

Ross stereo format lens, 7-1/4" x 4-1/4" Rapid Symmetrical by Ross, London. No.30076. (91/014/0030)

Aldis Anastigmat lens F7.7 No.7, 17886. f7.7; 11; 16; 23; 32; 45; 64. Could suit Baker & Rouse camera at Macleay 91/014/0010. (91/014/0031)

Original leather cylindrical lens case with push-on top, dark brown leather. [Now contains lenses at 91/014/0016 to 19]. (91/014/0050)

Original leather sylindrical lens case with push-on top, light brown leather. [Now contains lens at 91/014/0020]. (91/014/0051)

Lens, brass or alloy, 140mm x 80mm diameter, with aperture adjusted by means of moving a knob sideways around lens barrel, f stops 1 to 5. Focussing by rack and pinion. No brand or markings, probably American manufacture. "Dupain" hand-written on small white sticker. 1890s. (91/014/0054)

Lens, same construction as 91/14/54 90mm x 60mm diameter. "Dupain" hand-written on small white sticker. (91/014/0055)

Lens, Taylor, Taylor and Hobson, wide-angle, No.99606. "Cooke Primoplane Lens 4inch Series VIIAf /6.5". "Made in England". Paper tag tied to lens reads: "Covers 1/2 plate wide angle" and "Used half plate camera Sydney from S. Pylon 1938". (91/014/0056)

Very basic metal lens, no labelling, very dented. (91/014/0057)

Close up lenses for use with Nurex mounts. Powers of 1, 2 and 3 diopters, 42mm diameter. 2 Nurex envelopes, 3 beige envelopes with "close", "closer" and "closest", 1 instruction sheet, 1 aluminium 42mm mount with lens inserted. All contained in Kodak Professional 4 x 5" sheet film box. (91/014/0058)

Original box for "Schneider Componon 1:5.6/180 Normal" lens, "Schneider Optik Kreuznach" on top, "6710773" hand-written in European numbers on bottom of case in ink. (91/014/0063)

Kodak 8A portrait lens in original tin with hand-written note in pencil on paper. (91/014/0066)

Anthony leather and brass fold-up lens hood. (91/014/0069)
2002/4/11

 This text content licensed under CC BY-SA.
Acquisition credit line
Gift of the MacLeay Museum, University of Sydney,


Copyright
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