ROCHESTER, NY.- George Eastman House's Technology Collection has been recognized as an Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) for its historic significance as the world's leading collection of photographic and cinematographic technology.The vast collection includes a daguerreotype camera signed by Daguerre, an original 1888 Kodak, Ansel Adams's first cameras, a Technicolor camera that filmed MGM classics, the NASA Lunar Orbiter, the Speed Graphic camera that captured the flag-raising at Iwo Jima, and many technical marvels that made photography possible for amateurs and professionals.
"The collection at George Eastman House promotes the legacy of a great inventor while telling the story of an industry that has brought fun, leisure, and entertainment to many," said Madiha El-Mehelmy Kotb, past president of ASME. "This landmark designation pays tribute to the mechanical engineering ingenuity that has been incorporated in these devices."
Eastman House's Technology Collection is the 258th engineering marvel to be honored by ASME. An official designation ceremony was held at the Eastman House's Dryden Theatre on Monday, June 15. Other recipients of this landmark designation include the Disneyland Monorail System, the Apollo Space Command Module and the Apollo Space Suit, the Model T, the Refrigeration Research Museum, the Howard Hughes Flying Boat, and the Radio City Music Hall Hydraulically Actuated Stage.
ASME has designated landmarks, sites, and collections of historic importance to mechanical engineering since 1971 through its History and Heritage Landmarks Program. Landmark status indicates that the artifact, site, or collection represents a significant step forward in the evolution of mechanical engineering and is the best known example of its kind.
"Our technology collection at George Eastman House is the world's largest collections of photographic and cinematographic equipment - containing 19th- and 20th-century objects of photographic technology, many of which are unique, representing distinguished historical ownership and significant scientific achievement," said Dr. Bruce Barnes, the Ron and Donna Fielding Director at George Eastman House. "We are honored that our collection has been selected as a Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark, and are proud to become a member of such a prestigious group of institutions in the field."
The Cameras and Artifacts of the Technology Collection
Consisting of more than 16,000 artifacts from the earliest days of photography to today's integrated, handheld digital devices, the collection contains all of the equipment necessary for photographic image making, as well as printed documentation related to the business, manufacturing, and marketing of the photographic and motion picture industries.
From devices that predate the formal announcement of photography in 1839 to the modern instruments used by both amateurs and professionals, the collection offers an unparalleled opportunity to examine and learn about photographic technology. The collection includes cameras and equipment used by renowned photographers such as Ansel Adams, Eadweard Muybridge, Arnold Newman, Alfred Stieglitz, and Edward Weston.
The collection features the Eastman Kodak Company Patent collection, including an original model Brownie, which marked the true start of mass photography in 1900; the Super Kodak Six-20, the first automatic exposure camera; and the earliest-known digital single-lens reflex camera (SLR). Other rare artifacts include the O-Series Leica, which marked the beginning of hand-held 35mm photography; an Edison Kinetoscope; and a Cinématographe camera made by the Lumière brothers in France, which was the first machine to commercialize motion pictures.