'La Saisiaz.' Collonge-sur-Salève. View from the little cemetery. Photographer: Griffin, William Hall
Scope & Content:
Genre: Landscape Photography View looking along the highway at Collonges, with Mont Salève rising on the skyline beyond: 'Along this road the procession from 'La Saisiaz' came [to bury Anne Egerton Smith]. The wall of the cemetery is seen on the left, while the Salève seems to overhang.'
'La Saisiaz.' Chalet of La Saisiaz, the 'Bath-pool.' Photographer: Griffin, William Hall
Scope & Content:
Genre: Landscape Photography View of a small waterfall and bathing pool in the grounds of La Saisiaz: 'The grounds of the chalet consist of a long narrow strip of undulating ground, gradually sloping down from the base of La Salève. A spring flows through the grounds, and after forming a founta...
'La Saisiaz.' Collonge. The Cemetery. Photographer: Griffin, William Hall
Scope & Content:
Genre: Landscape Photography View looking towards the cemetery (burial place of Browning's friend Anne Egerton Smith), surrounded by vineyards and with the Rhone valley in the distance to the left.
'La Saisiaz.' The chalet of La Saisiaz. Photographer: Griffin, William Hall
Scope & Content:
Genre: Architectural Photography View looking across the garden towards the house where Browning stayed in 1877, with Mont Salève rising behind. The room in which his friend Anne Egerton Smith died is on the right on the first floor. Browning's room, on the left of the house, is not visible.
'Fra Lippo Lippi'. Firenze. R. Galleria Antica e Moderna. Dettaglio del Quadro l'Incoronazione della Vergine (Fra Filippo Lippi). Photographer: Alinari Fratelli
Scope & Content:
Inscription: Signed in the negative, 'R. I.' or 'I. R.' Genre: Fine Arts, Photography of A second copy (unmounted) of print 55, showing a detail of Lippi's 'Coronation of the Virgin.'
'Pippa passes.' Asolo. View from the 'Steps' down the valley. Photographer: Griffin, William Hall
Scope & Content:
Genre: Urban Topographical Photography 'Beyond the little low wall the ground descends very abruptly, and the valley runs down to the plain below. The verandah of Mrs Bronson's house, where Browning loved to visit and watch the sunsets is visible on the left at the end of the row of houses. Thi...