Anna Atkins
Photographer, Naturalist, Innovator
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Getty Trust Publications
Publishing:21st Oct '25
£18.99
This title is due to be published on 21st October, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Step into the world of Anna Atkins (1799-1871), perhaps the world's first female photographer and a pioneer of the medium. She lived an existence full of heartache and triumph, from her mother's death when Atkins was an infant to her publication of multiple photographic books as an adult. After the passing of her mother, Atkins was raised primarily by her father and grandfather, who placed an emphasis on both her emotional and intellectual growth. As a result, she spent her life surrounded by some of the greatest inventors of Victorian England during the Industrial Revolution.
Despite societal gender norms of the era, which typically limited women to a life within the home, Atkins gained the respect of the scientific community with her ambitious multivolume album Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions, now recognized as the world's first photographically illustrated book. Her cyanotypes, in addition to their scientific accuracy, added artistic beauty to her publications, setting the stage for new uses of this already experimental technology. In an era replete with state-of-the-art inventions and innovative ideas, Atkins pushed photography forward in its earliest days with courage, creativity, and brilliance.
Ages thirteen and up.
A pioneering botanist and one of the first photographers, Anna Atkins comes vividly to life in Corey Keller's engaging and beautifully written portrait of a Victorian woman whose cyanotypes still inspire art, science, and environmental thought today.
- Jennifer Tucker, Professor of History of Science & Visual Studies, Wesleyan University
Brilliant, lively, and deeply engaging, Anna Atkins: Photographer, Naturalist, Innovator brings to life the pioneering figure behind the first photographically illustrated book. In clear, compelling prose, Keller weaves together biography, science, and cultural history to show how Atkins deftly navigated-and challenged-the gendered constraints of Victorian society to produce a quietly radical body of work. Wide-ranging yet accessible, this book sheds new light on the scientific, artistic, and social worlds that shaped Atkins's extraordinary achievements. A must-read for anyone interested in the origins of photography, women in science, or the visual culture of the nineteenth century.
- Sarah Kennel, Curator of Photography and Director of the Raysor Center, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
This nuanced and beautifully written book is an excellent introduction to one of the pioneering photographers of the nineteenth century. Keller serves up a moving personal tale of Anna Atkins's life, work, and friendships in the context of nineteenth-century science, industry, and gender. With its beautiful drawings, herbaria, and photographs and Keller's careful and nuanced research, this book will be as popular with scholars as it is with students.
— Professor Kelley Wilder
ISBN: 9781947440111
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
112 pages