"Daguerre's American Legacy" - Facing the Camera, 1840 - 1900--On Exhibit April 18, 2014 to January 4, 2015--
MIT Museum is First US Venue for Landmark Photography Show
The
earliest photographic portraits were objects of wonder.
From
tentative beginnings in 1840, the
practice of capturing a person’s “perfect image and identity” with a
camera became
an industry, an art form, and a means for Americans from
all walks of life to send a personal and often intimate message about
themselves into the future.
These images, made during the 20 years before the Civil War, display the inventiveness and creativity of the American daguerreotype artists who helped build an entirely new medium based on Daguerre's invention. The exhibition includes the only documented portrait from the world's first photography studio, as well as a selection of rare images portraying Americans at work in occupations ranging from newsboy to cabinetmaker to telegraph operator. |
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![]() Susan Helen Aldrich De Kroyft (1818-1915) "The Blind Authoress of New York" Daguerreotype, 2.75 x 3.25 inches, circa 1849 Mrs.
De Kroyft married a young doctor in Rochester, New
York who
was gravely ill at the time of the ceremony.
Shortly after
the couple said their vows, he died. Within a month, she became blind.
Mrs. De Kroyft spent the rest of her long life writing about
her experiences, and traveling around the country selling her
books-- turning her personal tragedy into a career as one of the
best-selling self-published authors in American history.
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Daguerre's American Legacy also features the photographic technologies that followed the daguerreotype. These include Ambrotypes, on glass... tintypes, on thin sheets of iron... as well as cartes de visite and cabinet cards made on photographic paper. Visitors will see revealing pictures of family life, group portraits, and images that capture the way Americans expressed their character and identity when facing the camera. A selection of manipulated photographs includes such wonders as imaginary snowstorms created in the studio, double and triple exposures in which a single person appears as a set of twins or triplets, and spirit photographs complete with transparent ghosts. The images in Daguerre's American Legacy tell the story of American portrait photography... from its earliest days, when a mere likeness was enough to attract an excited crowd... to the year 1900, when portraits became less about outward appearance and more about projecting a character, personality, or mood. These are images from the past-- created with the future in mind. |
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George H. Dresser (1854 - 1912), Winfield, Kansas: Native American with Blonde Child. Albumen print cabinet card (4.5 x 6 inches), after 1883 | Henry Pollock, Baltimore, Maryland: Sallie H. White as a Vivandiere, holding a cigar and a pistol. Tinted albumen print cabinet card, (4.5 x 6 inches), 1870 | Unidentified Photographer: Three men with fish and lobster. Tintype, approximately 3 x 4 inches, circa 1890 |
![]() A 328-page book with 230 color illustrations, including all 220 images in this exhibition, is published by Mare & Martin of Paris in both French and English editions, titled Daguerre's American Legacy. The book is co-written by the exhibition's curators, François Brunet, Professor of American Art and Literature at the University of Paris - Diderot, and Wm. B. Becker, director of the American Museum of Photography. |
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Visit the US-based Daguerreian Society - Dedicated to the History, Science and Art of the Daguerreotype | Click
here for the
Society's home page (opens in a new browser window) |
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