Adelaide Marquand Hanscom Leeson (1876-1932) |
Hanscom was named after Adelaide Marquand, an early proponent of universal suffrage. Marquand's husband, Henry, was a business associate of Meldon Hanscom (young Adelaide's father), and later publisher of the Berkeley Advocate. Henry was co-editor of the Advocate with his wife, the adult Adelaide, who remained a family friend and an influence on Hanscom for many years thereafter.
Hanscom began creating art when she was a teenager and later studied art and design at the University of California. She began to take photographs while at the Mark Hopkins Institute of Art (now the San Francisco Art Institute). Her classmates, Emily Pitchford and Laura Adams, established their own studio, and by working with them, Hanscom expanded what she learned about photography while at school. Adelaide is also known to have spent time with photographer Anne Brigman and is thought to have learned some of her printing techniques from Brigman as well.
By 1900, Hanscom's work was entirely devoted to photography. She opened her own studio in partnership with Blanch Cumming in downtown San Francisco. Hanscom and Cumming produced the first edition of the lavishly illustrated Rubaiyat in 1905. Hanscom heavily manipulated her glass plates to affect a painterly, pictorialist style. Her images in this book are allegorical tableaux, featuring figures in ancient costume, enacting parts of Khayyam's verse. The first edition was printed on at least two different types of tissue, one limp and thin, and the other stiff and parchment-like. The book was published in at least three smaller sizes, all with halftones, sometimes in color.
Adelaide Hanscom Leeson Frontis The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam 1905 Photogravure |
Adelaide Hanscom Leeson Plate VII The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam 1905 Photogravure |
Adelaide Hanscom Leeson Plate XIV The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam 1905 Photogravure |
Adelaide Hanscom Leeson Plate XXIII The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam 1905 Photogravure |
Adelaide Hanscom Leeson Logo 1909 |
Hanscom married British mining engineer and ex-Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer Arthur Gerald Leeson in 1908. Soon after they moved to the area near Douglas, Alaska, for her husband's work on the Treadwell gold mine. They remained there for the next three years, although both Hanscom and her husband made yearly trips to Seattle and other areas outside of Alaska. In 1909 Hanscom spent several months in San Francisco after giving birth to a son, Gerald. During this time, most of her photographic work stopped while she supported her husband and raised their son. In 1911 the family moved to Danville, California, where her husband took up farming. Hanscom was able to set up a darkroom and resume her work. She provided similar Pictorialist style photographs for an edition of Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Sonnets from the Portuguese. The first edition included twenty tipped-in photogravures and was followed by two additional editions due to its popularity.
Adelaide Hanscom Leeson Sonnets of the Portuguese 1916 Photogravure |
Adelaide Hanscom Leeson Sonnets of the Portuguese 1916 Photogravure |
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Sources
Women Artists of the American West, Susan R. Ressler, Ed. p. 313.
The Art of the Photogravure, A Comprehensive Resource Dedicated to the Photogravure, http://www.photogravure.com/collection/searchResults.php?page=2&portfolio=68&view=small, retrieved November 18, 2014
The J. Paul Getty Museum,
The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam. With Illustrations from Life Studies by Adelaide Hanscom and Blanche Cumming, http://www.getty.edu/art/gettyguide/artObjectDetails?artobj=65995, retrieved November 18, 2014
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