{
    "data": {
        "id": 159630,
        "accession_number": "1996.347.8",
        "share_license_status": "Copyrighted",
        "tombstone": "Portfolio ofTen Dye Transfer Photographs: Cutting the Card Quickly!, 1964. Harold Eugene Edgerton (American, 1903\u20131990). Dye diffusion transfer process color print; image: 36 x 45.9 cm (14 3/16 x 18 1/16 in.); paper: 40.7 x 50.7 cm (16 x 19 15/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of the Harold and Esther Edgerton Family Foundation, 1996.347.8",
        "current_location": null,
        "title": "Cutting the Card Quickly!",
        "series": "Portfolio ofTen Dye Transfer Photographs",
        "creation_date": "1964",
        "creation_date_earliest": 1964,
        "creation_date_latest": 1964,
        "artists_tags": [
            "male"
        ],
        "culture": [
            "America"
        ],
        "technique": "dye diffusion transfer process color print",
        "support_materials": [],
        "department": "Photography",
        "collection": "PH - American 1951-Present",
        "type": "Portfolio",
        "measurements": "Image: 36 x 45.9 cm (14 3/16 x 18 1/16 in.); Paper: 40.7 x 50.7 cm (16 x 19 15/16 in.)",
        "dimensions": {
            "image": {
                "height": 0.36,
                "width": 0.459
            },
            "paper": {
                "height": 0.407,
                "width": 0.507
            }
        },
        "state_of_the_work": null,
        "edition_of_the_work": null,
        "copyright": null,
        "inscriptions": [
            {
                "inscription": "Written in pencil on verso: \"HAROLD EDGERTON [signed]\"; \"8501.2074/6404\"",
                "inscription_translation": null,
                "inscription_remark": null,
                "sortorder": null
            }
        ],
        "exhibitions": {
            "current": [],
            "legacy": [
                {
                    "description": "Main gallery rotation (gallery 229): October 28, 2014 - April 20, 2015.",
                    "opening_date": "2014-10-28T00:00:00"
                }
            ]
        },
        "provenance": [
            {
                "description": "The Harold and Esther Edgerton Family Foundation, Santa Fe, NM",
                "citations": [],
                "footnotes": [],
                "date": null,
                "sortorder": 1
            },
            {
                "description": "The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH",
                "citations": [],
                "footnotes": [],
                "date": "December 2, 1996",
                "sortorder": 2
            }
        ],
        "find_spot": null,
        "related_works": [],
        "former_accession_numbers": [],
        "did_you_know": null,
        "description": null,
        "external_resources": {
            "wikidata": [
                "https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q79979544"
            ],
            "internet_archive": []
        },
        "citations": [],
        "url": "https://clevelandart.org/art/1996.347.8",
        "images": {},
        "alternate_images": [],
        "creditline": "Gift of the Harold and Esther Edgerton Family Foundation",
        "image_credit": null,
        "sketchfab_id": null,
        "sketchfab_url": null,
        "gallery_donor_text": null,
        "athena_id": 159630,
        "creators": [
            {
                "id": 373,
                "description": "Harold Eugene Edgerton (American, 1903\u20131990)",
                "extent": null,
                "qualifier": null,
                "role": "artist",
                "biography": "Harold Eugene Edgerton American, 1903-1990\r\n\r\nInventor, scientist, and teacher Harold Edgerton became internationally known for his high-speed flash photographs of rapidly moving objects: a bullet ripping through an apple, the beating of a hummingbird's wings, the impact of a baseball on a bat. After receiving his doctorate in electrical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1931), Edgerton pursued pioneering research in stroboscopic photography that led to the development of the modern electronic speed flash and the ability to capture on film events not visible to the unaided human eye. Using various methods of flash synchronization, he was able to visually freeze the movements of birds, athletes in motion, and phenomena such as a drop of milk splashing onto a plate.\r\n\tAlthough best known for his many spectacular stop-action photographs, Edgerton was also involved in the development of underwater cameras and strobes, as well as sonar devices for geological research and underwater archaeological exploration. In addition to a distinguished teaching career at mit, Edgerton (born in Fremont, Nebraska) was a founding partner of eg&g, a company specializing in electronic technology. M.M.",
                "name_in_original_language": null,
                "birth_year": "1903",
                "death_year": "1990",
                "use_in_caption": true,
                "include_extent": false,
                "weight": 1
            },
            {
                "id": 68732,
                "description": "Palm Press, Inc.",
                "extent": "published by",
                "qualifier": null,
                "role": "publisher",
                "biography": null,
                "name_in_original_language": null,
                "use_in_caption": false,
                "include_extent": false,
                "weight": 2
            }
        ],
        "legal_status": "accessioned",
        "accession_date": "1996-12-02T00:00:00",
        "sortable_date": 1964,
        "date_added_to_oa": null,
        "date_text": "1964",
        "collapse_artists": true,
        "on_loan": false,
        "recently_acquired": false,
        "record_type": "component",
        "conservation_statement": null,
        "has_conservation_images": false,
        "cover_accession_number": "1996.347",
        "is_nazi_era_provenance": false,
        "impression": "74",
        "alternate_titles": [],
        "is_highlight": false,
        "updated_at": "2026-03-27 00:09:22.282000"
    }
}