Likenesses in the Latest Style: Historical Portrait Photography
- COLUMBUS, Georgia
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- June 16, 2011
Likenesses in the Latest Style: Historical Portrait Photography explores the formative era of portrait photography through an assemblage of dozens of stunning original images. Emerging in the mid-19th century simultaneously with a vibrant middle class that had the means and desire to capture the likenesses of loved ones for posterity, photography instantly transformed American life and made portrait photographs commonplace in households across the nation. The great demand for high-quality, inexpensive photographic portraits drove rapid technological changes that also revolutionized the medium itself within the short span of a few decades.
Combining artistic skill and scientific expertise, historic portrait photographs were prized depictions of individual personalities rendered with cutting-edge technology. Ranging from the straightforward poses of 1840s daguerreotypes to whimsical 1870s carte-de-visites, the photographs on display in this exhibition help illustrate the changes in photographic techniques during this critical period. Special sections of the exhibition will explain how and why studio portraits of the time were made, and highlight some of the work produced by the numerous local photographers of the era. Complementing the concurrent exhibition, Soldier Portraits: Contemporary Wet Plate Photographs by Ellen Susan, a significant portion of the historic images will feature soldiers from the Civil War era drawn from the holdings of noted Georgia collectors David Wynn Vaughan and George S. Whiteley IV.
Likenesses in the Latest Style: Historical Portrait Photography, July 9 – October 30, 2011
For more information, please visit www.columbusmuseum.com