Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Coming from backgrounds in fine arts and chemistry, respectively, David Octavius Hill and Robert Adamson began their photographic collaboration in 1843. Hill wanted to produce a large history painting documenting the Disruption movement, which culminated in the establishment of the Free Church of Scotland. To document the more than 450 individuals who appear in the painting, Adamson made portraits of them with the calotype (paper negative) process, a technology that yielded prints rich in masses of form rather than sharp detail or tonal range. The pair made around 2,500 calotypes over the course of their remarkable five-year project, which went far beyond their initial goals before ending with Adamson's early death. Although Jimmy Miller, the son of Professor James Miller, did not appear in the painting that Hill finally completed in 1866, his father and three other family members are identifiable subjects in the grand composition.
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The Misses Grierson
Mrs. Anne Rigby and Lady Elizabeth Eastlake
Portrait of Two Men (John Henning and Alexander Handyside Ri
Elizabeth Rigby, later Lady Eastlake (1809-1893)
View of a river with a promenade
Mrs. Anna Brownell Jameson
James Linton and Three Boys, Newhaven
Alexander Rutherford, William Ramsay, and John Liston, Newha
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Jimmy
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Jimmy
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Jimmy
Pierre-Louis Pierson — L'Ecossais
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — [Char
Pierre-Louis Pierson — Le dos
Edouard Baldus — Pierre Bourquelot de Cervignieres
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Sobie
Roger Fenton — Sir John Miller Adye (1819-1900), General; ta
Pierre-Louis Pierson — Le montagnard
Pierre-Louis Pierson — Le petit Russe
Pierre-Louis Pierson — Le petit Russe