Date
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Madame Yevonde and the VIVEX process - A talk by Disruptive Print
The work presented here is the result of a collaboration between the National Portrait Gallery and Disruptive Print, then part of the Centre for Print Research at the University of the West of England. The National Portrait Gallery approached us when they were looking for someone who could help them to print colour images taken by Madame Yevonde [1] in the 30s of the last century. Madame Yevonde was the most famous user of the VIVEX process [2] , the photomechanical reproduction process for colour photographs before the second world war in the UK. The VIVEX process was a commercial method and therefore only ill documented. What we know is that the images were taken through red, green, and blue filters on black and white film and then printed by layering pigmented gelatine layers in cyan, magenta, and yellow in top of each other, but how exactly is lost. We will discuss the registration of the three negatives and possible printing methods.
 
Disruptive Print
Disruptive Print is a collective of 4 printmakers with diverse backgrounds. Susanne Klein and Abigail Trujillo Vazquez are physicists, Elizabete Kozlovska is a conservator and Harrie Fuller a printmaker. Our research interests are old, partly forgotten, printing methods and how to
transform them into new, 21 st century, technologies with the aim to make them relevant again. All four of us are practising artists and our work can be seen in national and international print exhibitions.
Recommended Readings:
[1] N. P. Gallery. "Yevonde: A beginner's guide." National Portrait Gallery.
https://www.npg.org.uk/blog/yevonde-a-beginners-guide (accessed 25 of September,
2023).
[2] F. W. Coppin and D. A. Spencer, "Basic Features of the "VIVEX" process," The
Photographic Journal, vol. 88b, Section B: Scientific and Technical Photography, p. 5,
1948.