Meet Henry Holmes Smith: A Photographer Drawing with Light

K-12 Resource: Artist Bio

Read about a creative photographer who experimented with light

Project Details

  • Grade Level K–5
  • Subject Science, Art
  • Activity Type Reading

Assignment

Henry Holmes Smith was a super creative photographer and amazing teacher! In 1937, he helped start a cool photography program at Indiana University, where he taught for 30 years.

In 1946, Henry began making what he called “Light Study” photos. This started as an assignment for his students. He would use wood, paper, and refractive objects to play with and bend light from a projector and capture these “studies” through photographs.

Later on, Henry got even more creative. He took big pieces of glass and drew on them with a mix of light and dark corn syrup. Imagine that—drawing with syrup! Then, he flashed light through the glass onto special paper and made awesome prints. If he liked how it looked, he copied it onto film. His pictures often had shapes that looked like people or mythical creatures.

Meet Henry Holmes Smith

Vocabulary

Refraction

Refraction happens when light bends or changes direction as it passes through different materials, like water or glass. It’s like when you look at a straw in a glass of water, and it appears to be bent or broken. Refraction makes things look different than they really are because light bends as it moves through the water or glass. The adjective form of the word is refractive.