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The tension between emotive/aesthetic and analytic/scientific motifs in the work of amateur visual documenters of Antarctica's Heroic Era

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2017

Pat Millar*
Affiliation:
University of Tasmania (Patricia.Millar@utas.edu.au)
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Abstract

Visual documenters made a major contribution to the recording of the Heroic Era of Antarctic exploration. By far the best known were the professional photographers, Herbert Ponting and Frank Hurley, hired to photograph British and Australasian expeditions. But a great number of images – photographs and artworks – were also produced by amateurs on lesser known European expeditions and a Japanese one. These amateurs were sometimes designated official illustrators, often scientists recording their research. This paper offers a discursive examination of illustrations from the Belgian Antarctic Expedition (1897–1899), German Deep Sea Expedition (1898–1899), German South Polar Expedition (1901–1903), Swedish South Polar Expedition (1901–1903), French Antarctic Expedition (1903–1905) and Japanese Antarctic Expedition (1910–1912), assessing their representations of exploration in Antarctica in terms of the tension between emotive/aesthetic and systematic analytic/scientific motifs. Their depictions were influenced by their illustrative skills and their ‘ways of seeing’, produced from their backgrounds and the sponsorship needs of the expedition.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Belgica soon after return of sun (Photo: H. Arçtowski)

(In H. Arçtowski 1908: 33)
Figure 1

Fig. 2. Polypus levis Hoyle, from Kerguelen. (artwork: Winter)

(Source: Chun 1915, p. 201)
Figure 2

Fig. 3. Iceberg seen on December 7, 1898. (Watercolour: F. Winter.)

In: C. Chun 1903: 220.
Figure 3

Fig. 4. Aerial view of the Gauss in the ice, 1902 (Photo: E. Philippi)

(In E. von Drygalski 1905-31, Bd. 3, Teil 1, Plate 1: 337)
Figure 4

Fig. 5. The loss of the Antarctic (Photo: C.A. Larsen)

In: O. Nordenskjöld and J.G. Andersson 1905: 535.
Figure 5

Fig. 6. Français in the pack ice around Wandel Island, 1904 (Photo: P. Pléneau)

Source: Glass plate negative, Univ. Bordeaux, Musée d'ethnographie.
Figure 6

Fig. 7. 20 m high arch in an iceberg around 50 m high (Photo: P. Pléneau)

(Source: Glass plate negative, Univ. Bordeaux, Musée d'ethnographie)
Figure 7

Fig. 8. Kainan Maru struggles through icy seas (Watercolour: Capt. Nomura)

Source: H. Shibata 2012. Courtesy of the Hakui Historical Museum, Ishikawa-ken, Japan.