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| Edwin A. Abbey (After) - Itinerant Photographer in Mise-en-Scene with Horse-Drawn Carriage, African-Americans |
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Contact: Charles Schwartz Email: cms@cs-photo.com Phone: 212-534-4496
Company: Charles Schwartz Ltd. Company: 21 East 90th Street
Company: New York, NY 10128 USA
URL: http://www.cs-photo.com
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| Ref.#: 10607 |
| Price: $150 |
| Image Date: 1850c |
| Print Date: 1850c |
| Dimensions: 10 x 14.5 in. (254 x 368 mm) |
| Photo Country: United States (USA) |
| Photographer Country: United States (USA) |
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| Description: Original Illustration from Harper's Weekly Published Dec. 16, 1871.
This image is rife with many-layered meanings, raising questions about race, class, and the relationship of photography to the mass media in the Victorian Age.
Reads: "THE TRAVELING PHOTOGRAPHER IN THE COUNTRY.—FROM A SKETCH BY THOMAS WORTH." The engraving is signed in the lower right: "Edwin A Abbey fecit".
The image itself is both strange and highly descriptive. In it, we see an itinerant photographer standing in a doorway with his camera pointed, in a most unlikely fashion, out to the street (or perhaps a field near a farm). A wealthy white family is pulled up outside the photographer's wooden structure in a horse and carriage, as if the family wished to have its portrait taken outdoors. Numerous country folk are watching the scene with interest, including African-Americans, who are depicted in minstrel-like fashion, with exaggerated lips.
NOTE: There is paper loss in lower margin, affecting image. Top margin is affixed to mat. Please contact the gallery for a quote on shipping and insurance costs. If applicable, residents of New York will be charged sales tax. International clients will be responsible for their VAT. |
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