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Details

Latitude
50.70205785
Longitude
-3.104958513
Start Date
1846-01-01
End Date
1910-01-01

Description

Sources

ID
tb958c

Extended Data

Birth Place
Beer, Devon, England, UK
Biography
professional photographer, eldest son of John Adams Marchant (1820-1906), a miller and baker, and Thomazine née Board, was born on 18 December 1846 at Beer, Devon. He arrived with his parents in the Harwick in 1861 and began his photographic career in Weymouth Street, Adelaide, South Australia, in 1864, aged seventeen. Although ostensibly in partnership with his father at first, John Marchant appears to have taken no active part in the studio. Philip produced a very clever double self-portrait in about 1865 in which, still looking extremely youthful and wearing two different outfits, he presents himself as both photographer and client. As was noted at the time, no line of separation indicating the two negatives used is visible. In 1869 he was advertising carte-de-visite portraits at 12s a dozen, as well as moderate charges for photographs of 'Private & Public Buildings, Views &c.’ According to R.J. Noye, Marchant was probably Australia’s first commercial dry-plate manufacturer. He enjoyed considerable commercial success with the 'Adelaide Instantaneous Dry-Plate’ he began marketing about 1881. George Freeman of the Melbourne Photographic Company, Rundle Street, gave Marchant’s dry-plates a testimonial in the Evening Journal of August 1881 and they were well established by 1882 when Marchant was advertising them on the back of his photographic mounts, together with the boast that he took babies’ portraits in 'ONE SECOND’. Marchant’s Adelaide studio remained at Weymouth Street until 1882, then he moved to Gawler. He lived in a luxurious residence at Mars Hill, above the town, and continued to take dry-plate photographs. In 1887-97 he worked at Latrobe, Tasmania, after which he returned to Gawler. He had married Mary Bowering in Adelaide on 1 January 1869; they had eight surviving children. After his death on 7 August 1910 the Marchant photographic business continued through his eldest surviving son, Samuel Bowering Marchant, up to the present-day Adelaide firm. From the late 1870s, Philip’s brother Edwin was also practising as a photographer in South Australia. Writers: Staff Writer Date written: 1992 Last updated: 2011
Born
b. 18 December 1846
Summary
Philip Marchant was a colonial photographer in South Australia. Skilled in various photographic processes, he produced a double portrait of himself while showing no signs of how he did it, in order to advertise his business which claimed to take portraits of squirming infants in one second.
Gender
Male
Died
7-Aug-10
Age at death
64