John William Lindt
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John William Lindt (1845–1926), was a German-born Australian landscape and ethnographic photographer, early photojournalist, and portraitist.


Early life and arrival in Australia

Johannes Wilhelm Lindt (often referred to in the literature simply as J.W. Lindt, and his name anglicised in Australia as 'John William') was born at Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany, son of Peter Joseph Lindt, a customs officer, and his wife Justine, née Rambach. At 17 he took a working passage to Australia on a
Dutch Dutch commonly refers to: * Something of, from, or related to the Netherlands * Dutch people () * Dutch language () Dutch may also refer to: Places * Dutch, West Virginia, a community in the United States * Pennsylvania Dutch Country People E ...
sailing ship which he left at
Port Melbourne Port Melbourne is an inner-city List of Melbourne suburbs, suburb in Melbourne, Victoria (Australia), Victoria, Australia, south-west of Melbourne's Melbourne central business district, Central Business District, located within the Cities of ...
(Frost and Boddington,Jennie Boddington (1975) J. W. Lindt, photographer (1845–1926) Art Bulletin of Victoria, #16 basing their accounts on Cato, incorrectly have him disembarking—even 'deserting'—his ship at
Brisbane Brisbane ( ) is the capital and most populous city of the Australian state of Queensland, and the third-most populous city in Australia and Oceania, with a population of approximately 2.6 million. Brisbane lies at the centre of the South ...
). Taking up work as an itinerant piano-tuner, he traveled amongst towns in
Victoria Victoria most commonly refers to: * Victoria (Australia), a state of the Commonwealth of Australia * Victoria, British Columbia, provincial capital of British Columbia, Canada * Victoria (mythology), Roman goddess of Victory * Victoria, Seychelle ...
and
New South Wales ) , nickname = , image_map = New South Wales in Australia.svg , map_caption = Location of New South Wales in AustraliaCoordinates: , subdivision_type = Country , subdivision_name = Australia , established_title = Before federation , es ...
before settling in Grafton in 1863 where he became assistant and apprentice to photographer Conrad Wagner (c.1818- 1910).


Photographer

After a brief return to Germany in 1867 Lindt took over management of Wagner’s studio in 1869. He married Wagner’s daughter, Anna on 13 January 1872 and in March 1873 moved the studio into more luxurious premises in Prince Street. There, he advertised 'Portraits in any size and style of the Art, equal to Sydney Houses. Large instantaneous pictures of horses and cattle’. Between 1870-3 he made township views, scenes of mining and group portraits.Ken Orchard, Lindt, John William (1845-1926), in
Mateship Mateship is an Australian cultural idiom that embodies equality, loyalty and friendship. Russel Ward, in ''The Australian Legend'' (1958), once saw the concept as central to the Australian people. ''Mateship'' derives from '' mate'', meaning ...
features as a theme amongst his images of teams of bush workers.


Indigenous subjects

Over c.1873-1874, using the slow and laborious wet-plate collodion process Lindt produced photographs of the local indigenous people both in their environment conducting actual traditional ceremonies in the Clarence River district, and in his studio. In the latter, the subjects, set in elaborate recreations of natural environment, clothed traditionally, and surrounded by implements, are the more compositionally controlled because Lindt was able to prepare and process his plates with the necessary complex chemistry close at hand in his darkrooms. His prints were contact-printed from huge 20 x 16 inch (50.8 cm x 40.64 cm) wet plate negatives. Twelve of this series is included his 1874 album ''Australian Aboriginals''. Also during his Grafton years, from 1869-1876, Lindt produced ''Australian Types'' (c.1873-1874); and ''Characteristic Australian Scenery'' (1875) commissioned by the New South Wales Government for the 1876
Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition The Centennial International Exhibition of 1876, the first official World's Fair to be held in the United States, was held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, from May 10 to November 10, 1876, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the signing of the ...
. The albums include fastidiously composed and exposed images such as ''The Artist's Camp (Near Wintervale)'' (1875) and ''Tower Hill Creek'', N.S.W. (1875) each meticulously printed, qualities he maintained in his imagery henceforth. Contemporary commentary records the aboriginal studio portraits as "the first successful attempt at representing the native blacks truthfully as well as artistically." The ''Sydney Morning Herald'', of 24 November 1874 expanded on what made the photographs attractive to Europeans; The report clearly sets out a cynical nostalgia for the traditional ways of these people which is made sentimental by noting their 'decreasing numbers' as their country was cleared by loggers, expressing a common attitude amongst the colonists that the indigenous populations were doomed. Several of the individuals in Lindt's group portraits were identified in an article in the Grafton ''Argus'' covering the occasion of his departure to Sydney on the paddle steamer ''
Agnes Irving The ''Agnes Irving'' was an iron paddle steamer built in 1862 at Charles Lungley's Dockyard, Deptford Green on the River Thames, London.
'' where he was to publish his album of "12 views 6 inches by 8 inches, mounted upon tinted cardboard, 12 x 10 inches, the whole to be arranged in portfolio wrapping...which when bound up would form a suitable present for friends in England and other parts." The ''Argus'' article gives descriptions of each image, for example; In the album as published, in its presentation in exhibitions in Philadelphia, Calcutta and Amsterdam and in subsequent mechanical reprinting in the 1880s the captions, and thus identities, were omitted, and the subjects' clans and languages (
Gumbaynggirr The Gumbaynggirr people, also rendered Kumbainggar, Gumbangeri and other variant spellings, are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Mid North Coast of New South Wales. Gumbathagang was a probable clan or sub-group. The traditional lands of th ...
and Bandjalung), are not named and in other reproductions titles even incorrectly represent the subjects as being from 'Victoria' or elsewhere. The studio scenery and backdrops, while elaborate, are generic with little reference to the actual homelands of the people depicted. In recent times with the cooperation of the Grafton Regional Gallery, the subjects' identities are being traced by descendant Shauna Bostock-Smith, researcher Annika Korsgaard and others. Despite their constructed nature and depiction of what was then (incorrectly) perceived as a vanishing culture, Lindt’s Aboriginal tableaux were so highly regarded as scientific records when they were made that they were purchased by the New South Wales government for presentation to 'various scientific institutions in the old country’. Several were sent in 1875 to Italian Darwinist Enrico Giglioli. The current identities of such institutions, the
Museum of Mankind Ethnography at the British Museum describes how ethnography has developed at the British Museum. Within the Department of Natural History and Curiosities The ethnographical collection was originally linked to the Department of Natural History a ...
, the Royal Anthropological Institute, the
Royal Commonwealth Society The Royal Commonwealth Society (RCS) is a non-governmental organisation with a mission to promote the value of the Commonwealth and the values upon which it is based. The Society upholds the values of the Commonwealth Charter, promoting conf ...
(in London) and the
Pitt Rivers Museum Pitt Rivers Museum is a museum displaying the archaeological and anthropological collections of the University of Oxford in England. The museum is located to the east of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, and can only be accessed ...
in Oxford, all retain copies, and one set, now held in the Cambridge University Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, was acquired by Von Hégel on his 1874-77 visit to the South Pacific.


Melbourne

Lindt moved to
Melbourne Melbourne ( ; Boonwurrung/Woiwurrung: ''Narrm'' or ''Naarm'') is the capital and most populous city of the Australian state of Victoria, and the second-most populous city in both Australia and Oceania. Its name generally refers to a met ...
in 1876 where he worked for Batchelder & Co. before opening his own opulent studios at number 7 at the top of Collins Street opposite the Treasury, in 1877. His cartes-de-visite had printed "J. W. Lindt, Photographer, Prize Medallist Philadelphia, Sydney, Brisbane, Paris, 7 Collins Street, Melbourne" on the back. At a time of great wealth in Melbourne lavishly appointed studios were a sign of the rising status of photography in Australia, as elsewhere, and Lindt's studio was a prime example; his apprentice Herman Carl Krutli, who first visited within its third year remembered the ‘rich crimson velvet pile carpet of the reception room’ and posing for Lindt's first dry plate exposure in 1880. Lindt's business of this period was wide-ranging, and included portraits, records of Melbourne public buildings and streetscapes, the
Botanical Gardens A botanical garden or botanic gardenThe terms ''botanic'' and ''botanical'' and ''garden'' or ''gardens'' are used more-or-less interchangeably, although the word ''botanic'' is generally reserved for the earlier, more traditional gardens, an ...
, and
Port Melbourne Port Melbourne is an inner-city List of Melbourne suburbs, suburb in Melbourne, Victoria (Australia), Victoria, Australia, south-west of Melbourne's Melbourne central business district, Central Business District, located within the Cities of ...
. Tall and prepossessing, Lindt is remembered in 1955 by
Jack Cato John Cyril "Jack" Cato, F.R.P.S. (4 April 1889 – 14 August 1971) was a significant Australian portrait photographer in the Pictorialist style, operating in the first half of the twentieth century. He was the author of the first history of Aust ...
in this colourful description in his ''The Story of the Camera in Australia'': He was a welcome photographer of members of parliament and other Melbourne personalities, their society and cultural life including the theatre, and was known as a ‘rich man’s photographer’ for those whose families he grouped informally on the lawns in front of their mansions, with servants at the rails of the upstairs balconies. He continued with landscape, producing folios ''Fernshaw and Watt River Scenery, Victoria'' ( c.1878-82), ''Scenery on the Ovens and Buckland Rivers, Victoria'' (c.1878–82) and ''Lorne, Louttit Bay and Cape Otway Ranges'' (1883). Sales of his
Black Spur The Black Spur is a road between the towns of Healesville and Narbethong in Victoria, Australia. It is also known as Black Spur Drive and is part of the Maroondah Highway. Location The Black Spur is located about 60 kilometers North-East ...
scenery amounted to approximately 25,000 copies printed from the original negatives between 1882 and 1892. In June 1880 a Melbourne newspaper commissioned Lindt to document the capture of the notorious bush-rangers, the
Kelly gang Edward Kelly (December 1854 – 11 November 1880) was an Australian bushranger, outlaw, gang leader and convicted police-murderer. One of the last bushrangers, he is known for wearing a armour of the Kelly gang, suit of bulletproof armour dur ...
in Glenrowan, Victoria. Arriving after the event, Lindt produced a wet plate image ''Body of Joe Byrne, member of the Kelly gang, hung up for photography, outside the Benalla lock-up''. His panoramic image, made on 29 June, encompasses the Victorian government photographer A.W. Burman (son of William Insull Burman ), the artist Julian Ashton sketching Byrne’s body for the '' Illustrated Sydney News'', with casual bystanders. It is amongst his most famous images and has been hailed as the earliest press photograph taken in Australia. During the early 1880s Lindt contemplated exchanging his career from photographer to photographic supplier, after his return abroad the ''Liguria'' on 31 August 1881 from visiting Europe to source the latest photographic equipment, Lindt became sole Australian agent for numerous studio suppliers, including Enholtz’s scenic backgrounds. Thus keeping abreast of developments in the medium, from about 1881 he was using the recently introduced
Voigtländer Voigtländer () was a significant long-established company within the optics and photographic industry, headquartered in Braunschweig, Germany, and today continues as a trademark for a range of photographic products. History Voigtländer was f ...
Euryscope lenses on his Haake & Albers’ studio cameras, and to produce enlargements. He quickly adopted the commercial dry plates which he ordered from England soon after they became commercially available. An accomplished technician, he readily adapted and invented equipment to suit his needs. From 1884 operated a second studio installed behind his newly acquired estate; ‘Ethelred’ in Hawthorn, in order to accommodate the high demand for his work.


New Guinea

A keen ethnographer of the nineteenth-century persuasion, in 1885 Lindt joined Major-General Sir
Peter Scratchley Major General Sir Peter Henry Scratchley (24 August 1835 – 2 December 1885) was special commissioner for Great Britain in New Guinea 1884–1885 and defence adviser for Australia. Biography Scratchley was born in Paris, thirteenth child of Dr ...
, superintendent of coastal defences, in an expedition from Sydney on the ''Governor Blackall'' to the newly proclaimed Protectorate of British New Guinea. As its official photographer, his first journey was up the Laloki River as far as the Rano Falls to the native villages at Sadara and Makara, then he made pictures of a
lakatoi Lakatoi (also Lagatoi) are double-hulled sailing watercraft of Papua New Guinea. They are named in the Motu language and traditionally used in the Hiri trade cycle. Gallery File:Picturesque New Guinea Plate V (a) - Loading Lakatoi, Port Mor ...
s on
Port Moresby (; Tok Pisin: ''Pot Mosbi''), also referred to as Pom City or simply Moresby, is the capital and largest city of Papua New Guinea. It is one of the largest cities in the southwestern Pacific (along with Jayapura) outside of Australia and New ...
harbour, before venturing into the Owen Stanley Range, at night processing his plates by the light of a
hurricane lamp A kerosene lamp (also known as a paraffin lamp in some countries) is a type of lighting device that uses kerosene as a fuel. Kerosene lamps have a wick or mantle as light source, protected by a glass chimney or globe; lamps may be used on a tab ...
wrapped in red trade cloth. Receiving news that his wife was ill, they returned, but Sir Peter Scratchley died of fever on the return journey. Lindt produced several hundred dry plate negatives of tribal life, and the resultant album was shown at the Indian and Colonial Exhibition in London in 1886. During a visit to the optical institutions and manufacturers which he represented commercially, Lindt secured a publisher for fifty of these pictures in ''Picturesque New Guinea'' (London, 1887) which, printed in a new autotype process, took full commercial advantage of the advent of half-tone printing. By this means, the 1880s photographs by Lindt were the earliest from PNG to be seen by a wider audience, which enhanced his reputation as a photographer. Hasselberg and Quanchi note that Lindt's iconic images, such as the water-carrier, lakotoi sailing canoe and the tree houses, became exemplars imitated by photographers who followed. In the next year, he was honoured with appointment as a Fellow in the Royal Geographical Society. In 1888 The Argus praised the quality of this work: "It has often been a matter of discussion how far, or whether at all photography may be considered a fine art. By the work of J. W. Lindt this question is decided in a way that is a triumph for his profession.


Collins Street studio

In 1889 Lindt moved his studio to 177 Collins Street and on 10 July 1889 he married his retoucher Catherine Elizabeth Cousens after the death, on 27 May 1888, of his first wife in giving birth to a stillborn. He was commissioned by the Victorian Government to document, for a series of promotional lantern slide lectures, the
Chaffey brothers George Chaffey (28 January 1848 – 1 March 1932) was a Canadian–born engineer who with his brother William developed large parts of Southern California, including what became the community of Etiwanda and cities of Ontario, and Upland. They ...
' pioneering irrigation works on the River Murray at
Mildura Mildura is a regional city in north-west Victoria, Australia. Located on the Victorian side of the Murray River, Mildura had a population of 34,565 in 2021. When nearby Wentworth, Irymple, Nichols Point and Merbein are included, the area h ...
in north-west Victoria.Valerie Frost, 'Lindt, John William (1845–1926)', ''Australian Dictionary of Biography'', National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, Volume 5, (MUP), 1974
The Royal Geographical Society The Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers), often shortened to RGS, is a learned society and professional body for geography based in the United Kingdom. Founded in 1830 for the advancement of geographical scien ...
(R.G.S.) supported Lindt’s further expeditions, first to the
New Hebrides New Hebrides, officially the New Hebrides Condominium (french: link=no, Condominium des Nouvelles-Hébrides, "Condominium of the New Hebrides") and named after the Hebrides Scottish archipelago, was the colonial name for the island group ...
in 1890 where in June he climbed the Tanna volcano, and to Fiji in 1891 during which he documented a fire-walking ceremony, first published as plates in the Transactions of the R.G.S, that were hailed as proof that the traditional ordeal did exist and was not a visual figment of group hysteria. Having made his island imagery into
lantern slides The magic lantern, also known by its Latin name , is an early type of image projector that used pictures—paintings, prints, or photographs—on transparent plates (usually made of glass), one or more lenses, and a light source. Because a si ...
he conducted numerous popular lectures which were credited with creating a boom in island tourism.


Later career

Though he had speculated in the 1880s land boom as a director of the Melbourne and Adelaide Real Estate Company, Lindt was adversely impacted by the subsequent 1890s depression so that in 1893 he was advertising that his rates of "16 years" for 'cabinet portraits' were being reduced from 40 shillings per dozen to 15s/6d (2018 equivalents of $A250, to $A100), and he exhibited at his 'Austral Studios' at 117 Collins Street a series of city views, at a half-price cut from "15 shillings a dozen to 8s. and 6d a dozen" for work that had "won thirty gold medals". He managed to produce a last
ethnographic Ethnography (from Greek ''ethnos'' "folk, people, nation" and ''grapho'' "I write") is a branch of anthropology and the systematic study of individual cultures. Ethnography explores cultural phenomena from the point of view of the subject ...
portfolio, of a touring Northern Australian Aboriginal performing troupe in an indoor studio setting in 1893, before in 1894 or 1895, he closed his studio. As early as 1883 he had been exhibiting pictures of the Blacks' Spur (now
Black Spur The Black Spur is a road between the towns of Healesville and Narbethong in Victoria, Australia. It is also known as Black Spur Drive and is part of the Maroondah Highway. Location The Black Spur is located about 60 kilometers North-East ...
) in the Dandenong Ranges and, having survived the economic depression, in 1894 he built and moved to a guesthouse ‘The Hermitage’ with a garden designed by his friend Ferdinand von Mueller, and featuring New Guinea tree houses from which he made frequent panoramas of his property and surrounding primeval forest of towering, 30-metre
mountain ash Mountain ash may refer to: * ''Eucalyptus regnans'', the tallest of all flowering plants, native to Australia * Mountain-ashes or rowans, varieties of trees and shrubs in the genus ''Sorbus'' See also * Mountain Ash, Rhondda Cynon Taf Mounta ...
. There, from the age of 50, and in semi-retirement, he wrote articles, conducted international correspondence, and continued his photography in a studio 30m x 8m, with a wall glazed in
ground glass Ground glass is glass whose surface has been ground to produce a flat but rough (matte) finish, in which the glass is in small sharp fragments. Ground glass surfaces have many applications, ranging from ornamentation on windows and table glassw ...
. In it he photographed guests, of whom he also made outdoor portraits in the bush setting, and projected lantern slides for their entertainment. He showed in the
Victorian Artists Society The Victorian Artists Society, which can trace its establishment to 1856 in Melbourne, promotes artistic education, art classes and gallery hire exhibition in Australia. It was formed in March 1888 when the Victorian Academy of Arts (previously V ...
’s Albert Street Art Gallery in 1909. In 1913 he collaborated with
Nicholas Caire Nicholas John Caire (28 February 1837 – 13 February 1918) was an Australian photographer. Caire was born in Guernsey, Channel Islands, to Nicholas Caire and Hannah Margeret. As a boy Caire spoke French found he had a passion for photography th ...
to produce a tourist booklet on the area. Though he suffered from anti-German sentiment during and after WW1, and had to defend himself when a public meeting was called at the local shire council hall to demand that he be sent to a
concentration camp Internment is the imprisonment of people, commonly in large groups, without charges or intent to file charges. The term is especially used for the confinement "of enemy citizens in wartime or of terrorism suspects". Thus, while it can simpl ...
, Lindt continued to sell prints from his older glass negatives and from new photographs he took of his forest home, guests in his gardens, and genre scenes. In 1925 the '' Argus'' reported that Lindt "continues to produce remarkable and most artistic pictures of the beauties of mountain landscape. He is not a believer in the blurred effects favoured by many ... instead he is a master of detail." Aged 81Marie McLardy, ‘Our oldest living photographer’, ''Australian Photo-Review'', 54, September 1947, pp. 484–489. Lindt died of heart failure during disastrous bushfires on 19 February 1926 at the Hermitage. He was survived by his wife Catherine who continued to run ‘The Hermitage’ guest house before she retired to the city. In the early 1930s, Joan Anderson purchased the property, maintaining it as a guest house until the 1950s after which the condition of the property deteriorated until in 1979 it was sold and restored, and reopened as a guest house in 1988.


Contemporary evaluation

Lindt's staged studio spectacles of indigenous people are now regarded as exemplifying a colonial attitude that the Australian aborigine was an inferior, dying race whose inevitable vanishment was a romantic curiosity that warranted a photographic record. In the field, in New Guinea, his marketable imagery of the 'mysterious shores of Papua and their savage inhabitants' were posed, by subjects bribed or coerced to do so, against suitably picturesque backgrounds chosen by Lindt, and thus are no more accurate as
ethnographic Ethnography (from Greek ''ethnos'' "folk, people, nation" and ''grapho'' "I write") is a branch of anthropology and the systematic study of individual cultures. Ethnography explores cultural phenomena from the point of view of the subject ...
records than his studio
tableaux The International Conference on Automated Reasoning with Analytic Tableaux and Related Methods (TABLEAUX) is an annual international academic conference that deals with all aspects of automated reasoning with analytic tableaux. Periodically, it jo ...
, and are loaded with romance and prejudice derived from his reading of British accounts and diaries of colonialists' adventures in Africa. Quanchi criticises the voyeuristic intention of the cover image, widely reproduced and imitated, of ''Picturesque New Guinea'', which shows an adolescent, bare-breasted, partially clothed Motu girl carrying a pot on her shoulder. The 'natural' backdrop was, nevertheless, a device he continued even with his European subjects who were guests at 'The Hermitage'. Lindt's landscapes, even his earliest made along the Orara River, a tributary of the Clarence, have continued to earn praise as fine examples of 'proto-'
Pictorialism Pictorialism is an international style and aesthetic movement that dominated photography during the later 19th and early 20th centuries. There is no standard definition of the term, but in general it refers to a style in which the photographer ha ...
; he being regarded as "one of the first photographers to use the camera creatively to move beyond recording to make evocative pictures...recognised nationally and internationally for his artistic contribution to the development of photography." Boddington notes a "true serenity and majesty of nature" in Lindt’s landscapes but cautions that they "deteriorate eventually to sentimentality," and though by the 1930s numbers of Australian Pictorialists "glorified the gum-tree," they were "a lamentable descent from John William Lindt" though the decline was "indicated, hinted at, foreseen in his latest bush studies when he had so completely withdrawn to The Hermitage." His c.1890 maritime drama, a purposefully-worked albumen print showing a stricken vessel under breaking skies is a notable example from the zenith of his powers. However in the case of Lindt's New Guinea landscapes, Ryan shows that he used the presence of indigenous inhabitants for aesthetic appeal, adding or subtracting figures to make a picturesque effect in support of a colonialist ideology. Instead of etching his image title and name into the emulsion of his plates as was the convention, Lindt physically inserted a small wooden sign 'LINDT, MELBOURNE, COPYRIGHT' in white lettering, into the scene (see above; ''The Haunt of the Alligator, Laloki River''), in effect "staking his claim to the landscape and marking permanently the scene as his property and copyright," and thus photography becomes an instrument of visual colonisation, just as did cartography and surveying, translating "unknown territory into familiar scenes, opening up distant territory to imperial eyes"


Publications

* * * * * *


Exhibitions

* 1876, August; 'Queensland Exhibition', Brisbane * 1893, March; Views of Melbourne and other cities, Austral Studio, 119 Collins St., MelbourneThe Age, Thursday, 2 Mar 1893, p.2


Retrospective exhibitions

* ''Portraits of Oceania'': 27 August-26 October 1997, Art Gallery of New South Wales * ''Australien im Auge der Kamera: Charles Kerry, John W. Lindt'', 29 Oct – 5 Dec 2004,
Ethnological Museum of Berlin The Ethnological Museum of Berlin (german: Ethnologisches Museum Berlin) is one of the Berlin State Museums (german: Staatliche Museen zu Berlin), the de facto national collection of the Federal Republic of Germany. It is presently located in ...
* ''An unorthodox flow of images'', Melbourne Festival, 29 Sep – 12 Nov 2017, Centre for Contemporary Photography, Melbourne


Collections

* State Library of Victoria, Melbourne * State Library of New South Wales, Sydney * National Gallery of Australia, Canberra * National Library of Australia, Canberra *National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne * Clarence River Historical Society, Grafton * Grafton Regional Gallery


Awards and recognition

* April 1876: silver medal from the New South Wales Academy of Art * International photographic exhibition at Frankfurt: judge * Photographic Association of Vienna: gold medal * Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, London. * Medals in exhibitions in Amsterdam, Calcutta and Frankfurt. * 1888 Melbourne International Exhibition: official photographer * 1893: councillor of the Victorian branch of the Royal Geographical Society


References


Further reading

* Croft. Brenda. ‘Laying ghosts to rest’, in ''Portraits of Oceania'', edited by Judy Annear. Sydney: Art Gallery of New South Wales. 1997. * Davies, Alan. ''An Eye for Photography: The Camera in Australia'', Sydney, The Miegunyah Press in association with the State Library of New South Wales, 2004. * De Lorenzo, Catherine & Deborah van der Platt, ‘More Than Meet the Eye: Photographic Record of Humboldtian Imaginings.’ in ''Mosaic'' 237. Vol. 37. No.4 edited by Dawne McCance, Manitoba: University of Manitoba, Winipeg, Canada. 2004. * Johanson, Graeme & Shar Jones, ‘J. W. Lindt,’ in ''The Dictionary of Australian Artists Painters, Sketchers, Photographers and Engravers to 1870'', edited by Joan Kerr, Melbourne: Oxford University Press. 1992. * Jones, Shar, ''J. W. Lindt: Master Photographer''. Melbourne: Currey O’Neil Ross & the Library Council of Victoria, 1985. * Newton, Gael, ''Shades of Light: Photography and Australia 1839-1988'', Canberra: Collins Australia & the Australian National Gallery, 1988. * Orchard, Ken, ‘J. W. Lindt’s Australian Aboriginals (1873-74) in ''History of Photography'', Vol. 23, No.2, edited by Michael D. Galimany, London: Taylor & Francis 1999. * -- The John William Lindt Collection Grafton: Grafton Regional Gallery, New South Wales, 2005. * Poignant, Roslyn, "Surveying the Field of View: the Making of the R.A.I. Photographic Collection," in ''Anthropology and Photography 1860-1900'', edited by Elizabeth Edwards, London: Yale University Press in association with The Royal Anthropological Institute, London. 1992. * Quartermaine, Peter, ‘Johannes Lindt: Photographer of Australia and New Guinea’ in ''Representing Others: White Views of lndigenous People'' edited by Mick Gidley, Exeter: Exeter Studies in American and Commonwealth Arts, No.4 University of Exeter Press 1992. * Willis, Anne-Marie. ''Picturing Australia : A History of Photography''. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. 1988. {{DEFAULTSORT:Lindt, John William Australian photojournalists 1845 births 1926 deaths Landscape photographers German photojournalists Documentary photographers German emigrants to Australia Ethnographers 19th-century Australian photographers