Table of the Permeability of Various Substances to Roentgen Rays

Art Institute of Chicago

Table of the Permeability of Various Substances to Roentgen Rays

Josef Maria Eder (Austrian, 1855–1944) and

Date
1896
Medium
Photogravure, plate No. 5 from "Research on Photography with Röntgen Rays (Versuche über Photographie mittelst der Röntgen’schen Strahlen)"
Culture
Austria
Department
Photography and Media
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen discovered x-rays on November 8, 1895, and announced his surprising find in a scientific paper at the end of that year. Within days, newspapers everywhere had picked up the story, and the x-ray's manifold applications to science and society began to be explored. Just a few months later, the Austrian chemists Josef Maria Eder and Eduard Valenta replicated Röntgen's experiments and made improvements to his apparatus, publishing their research in a booklet accompanied by fifteen photogravure images depicting objects and animals. In this image, they showed the responsiveness of a variety of materials (metals, glass, bone, wood, rubber, and more) to the x-ray, showing a range of permeability that is represented as different shades of gray. This elegant arrangement of samples from the darkest black to nearly white suggests a fundamental compatibility between scientific and aesthetic ordering principles in the nineteenth century.

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Object type
AAT300046300

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