Frederick H. Evans – A sea of steps

Frederick H. Evans (British, 1853–1943) was best known for his photographs of medieval cathedrals, such as the image of England’s Wells Cathedral—arguably the best-known example of his work.


Yet Evans was also accomplished in the areas of portraiture, landscape, and photomicrography (photography made using a microscope), and he brought to each subject the same intensity that characterizes his cathedral images. He believed firmly that only a good negative would yield the perfect print, and his high standards for presentation extended to the elaborate mounting of the actual photographs. Using both a “straight” approach (not altering his negatives) and pictorial sensitivity to subject and style, Evans’s work, created more than 100 years ago, continues to move and inspire.