ORIGINAL RICHARD STEREOPTICAN VIEWER, WITH 140 ORIGINAL GLASS SLIDES OF FEMALE NUDES
RICHARD, Jules. Stéréoscope Breveté. Paris: Jules Richard, circa 1900-20. Hand-held wooden box-type stereoptican viewer (5 by 3 by 4-1/2 inches), with rack and pinion focusing, ivory name plate; 140 gelatin-on-glass (Taxiphote) transparencies. Housed together in a custom carrying case.
Original Stéréoscope Breveté viewer, designed and produced by Jules Richard, with 140 commercial glass stereoptican slides of female nudes.
“Stereo photography combined the work of two Victorian inventors, Sir Charles Wheatsone and Sir David Brewster, who used photography to popularise their discoveries. Stereo negatives when exposed in a camera produced two almost identical photographs which were then placed in a viewer that enabled them to be seen three dimensionally” (Powerhouse Museum). Parisian photographer Jules Richard developed a fool-proof stereo camera that he patented in 1893 under the name of the “Vérascope Richard.” “Taking the principles of stereoscopic photography that appeared at the beginning of the 1850s, this process, destined for amateurs restored ‘absolute perspective and relief,’ according to its inventor. It was instantly a great success, partly because it was easy to use. It remained in use until the 1930s” (Musée d’Orsay). Richard’s innovative camera produced glass slides (“vues prises avec le Vérascope Richard”) that could be seen through his Stéréoscope Breveté S.G.D.G, offered here with 140 original commercial slides of female nudes, for the most part taken in Richard’s own garden, which he called “The Atrium.”
Complete and in fine condition.