Six views (portraits) of a man, possibly William Carrick
Photograph
1860s
1860s
Artist/Maker |
The carte de visite was patented in 1854 by the French photographer André-Adolphe-Eugène Disdéri, and soon became the most common type of photograph. Between four and six miniature portraits could be taken on one glass plate negative. Sitters then chose their favourites, which were printed, cut out and mounted onto calling cards. It was fashionable to exchange and collect images of family, friends, royalty and celebrities, into specially designed albums.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Six views (portraits) of a man, possibly William Carrick (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | albumen print |
Brief description | Photographs by William Carrick, 'Six views (portraits) of a man, possibly William Carrick', ca. 1860s, albumen print |
Physical description | Six portraits comprise this single piece - each depicts a different view of the same bearded, male subject, possibly the artist himself |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | W. Carrick, 19, petite Mo(n?)skoi |
Gallery label | Photography Centre 2018-20:
William Carrick; Ashford Brothers & Co.; Cornelius Jabez Hughes; J.J. Rugg; R. Green; A.W. Turner; J.J. Mayall; Edwards & Simonton; Gregory & Eddy; T. Heaviside; R. James; J. Porter; Ross & Pringle; Southwell Brothers; Enrico Van Lint; Camille Silvy; Elliott & Fry; J. Chaufly; Hills & Saunders; Arthur Debenham; unknown photographers
Cartes de visite
1850s–70s
The carte de visite was patented in 1854 by the French photographer André-Adolphe-Eugène Disdéri, and soon became the most common type of photograph. Between four and six miniature portraits could be taken on one glass plate negative. Sitters then chose their favourites, which were printed, cut out and mounted onto calling cards. It was fashionable to exchange and collect images of family, friends, royalty and celebrities, into specially designed albums.
Albumen prints
Museum nos. E.625, 539, 794, 656, 638, 573, 670, 585, 619, 772, 731, 745, 720, 792, 793, 580, 533, 609, 671, 615, 614, 667, 495, 651, 493, 583, 639, 620, 589, 532-1995; 226-1967; E.514, 30-2009 |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | The carte de visite was patented in 1854 by the French photographer André-Adolphe-Eugène Disdéri, and soon became the most common type of photograph. Between four and six miniature portraits could be taken on one glass plate negative. Sitters then chose their favourites, which were printed, cut out and mounted onto calling cards. It was fashionable to exchange and collect images of family, friends, royalty and celebrities, into specially designed albums. |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.30-2009 |
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Record created | June 8, 2009 |
Record URL |
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