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Boars Head, White Terrace

Object | Part of Photography collection

item details

NameBoars Head, White Terrace
ProductionBurton Brothers; photography studio; 1870s; Dunedin
Classificationphotographic prints, albumen prints, black-and-white prints, vintage prints
Materialssilver, albumen, printing-out paper, mounting board
Materials SummaryBlack and white photograph, albumen silver print
Techniquesalbumen process, printing-out
DimensionsImage: 199mm (width), 142mm (height)
Registration NumberO.043013
Credit linePurchased 2014

Overview

… the wonders of the pink and white terraces, with their boiling cauldrons and their crystal and coral cups … have no counterparts elsewhere.

‘The New Zealand Tourist’, New Zealand Mail, 8 November 1879

In the 19th century, New Zealand was home to the ‘eighth wonder of the world’, the Pink and White Terraces at Lake Rotomahana near Rotorua. They quickly became the country’s most popular tourist attraction, though most people experienced them through photographs.

Photographers pictured the terraces from multiple perspectives, but colours were beyond the technology of the time. Some attempted to convey the pink hues by hand-colouring their prints later.
The terraces were buried in the eruption of Tarawera on 10 June 1886, but photographers continued to produce prints of them from negatives into the 20th century.