The photographs of Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii (1863-1944) offer a vivid portrait of a lost world - the Russian Empire on the eve of World War I and the coming revolution.

Born in St. Petersburg and educated as a chemist, Prokudin-Gorskii devoted his career to the advancement of photography. In the early 1900s, he developed an ingenious technique of taking colour photographs. The same object was captured in black and white on glass plate negatives, using red, green and blue filters. He then presented these images in colour in slide lectures using a light-projection system involving the same three filters.

Around 1907 Prokudin-Gorskii envisioned and formulated a plan to use the emerging technological advancements that had been made in colour photography to systematically document the Russian Empire. Through such an ambitious project, his ultimate goal was to educate the schoolchildren of Russia with his "optical colour projections" of the vast and diverse history, culture, and modernization of the empire. The plan won the support of Tsar Nicholas II. Between 1909-1912, and again in 1915, Prokudin-Gorskii completed surveys of eleven regions, traveling in a specially equipped railroad car provided by the Ministry of Transportation. His subjects ranged from the medieval churches and monasteries of old Russia, to the railroads and factories of an emerging industrial power, to the daily life and work of Russia's diverse population.

In 1918, having lost all his money and property during the revolution, Prokudin-Gorskii went into exile, taking with him only his collection of nearly 2,000 glass-plate negatives and his photograph albums. The collection was purchased by the Library of Congress (LOC) in 1948 from his heirs.

In 2001, the number of glass plates have been scanned and, through an innovative process known as digichromatography, brilliant colour images have been produced. Virtual exhibition The Empire that Was Russia attracted millions of people throughout the world.

When I first saw Prokudin-Gorskii’s photographs, I was so amazed and fascinated that immediately decided to try digichromatography myself. I have downloaded and restored over 60 images that you can see on this website.

Please note that these images are NOT colorized black and white photographs. They were actually taken in colour about hundred years ago!

Because of many years of negligent storing, most of the negatives are in very poor condition, and it takes me hours of scrupulous work to restore their original brilliance. It is just the beginning of the work and I am going to continue. Hundreds of unique colour images of the past are still waiting to be returned back to life.

Alex Gridenko

 

 

01149  City of Zubtsov, across the Volga
01149

01442  General view of the Golutvinskii Monastery [Kolomna]
01142

00052  Hotel in a Small Town
00052
00455  Perm. Headquarters of the Ural Railway Administration
00455
00246  Railroad bridge over the Shuia River
00246
00458  Steam engine "Compound" with a Schmidt super-heater
00458
01018  Stone-excavating machine of the single scoop type Svirskaia no. 2.
01018
00548  View from the rear platform of the Simskaia Station of the Samara-Zlatoust Railway
00548
00521  General view of the Zlatoust plant and the Church of Three Saints
00521
00530  Saint Nicholas the Wonder Worker Chapel in the Vetluga settlement
00530
00531  Church in Vetluga settlement
00531

00600
00791  Hut of settler Artemii, nicknamed Kot
00791
01536  General view of monasery,  Novyi Afon
01536
01709  Corner of a dacha
01709
01641  Mosque in Vladikavkaz
01641
01497  At the Black sea shore. In Uzurgety
01497
01697  Gagra wharf
01697
01526  Sukhumi. General view of the city and bay
01526
00218  At the Capri Island
00218
00881  Sart house. Samarkand
00881
01782  Mulberry tree. Samarkand
01782
01739  Trader in the Registan. Samarkand
01739
01748   Kebab house. Samarkand
01748
01783  Carpenter. Samarkand
01783
01813  At entrance to the Passage of the Dead. Samarkand
01813
01817  Main entrance into Shakh-i Zindeh mosque. Samarkand
01817
01863  Kush-Beggi (Minister of the Interior). [Bukhara, Russian Empire]
01863
0325  Fishing settlement
00325
00373  River Koloch at the village of Gorki with a high bank. Borodino [Battlefield]
00373
000193  In Italy
00193
01590  Corner of the Likanskii palace
01590

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