Photographer's female model thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Photographer's female model

Photograph
1850s (photographed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The daguerreotype process was introduced to the public in 1839 by Frenchman Louis Daguerre, and was hugely popular as a medium for portraiture until the middle of the 1850s. To create a daguerreotype, a silver plated sheet was given a light sensitive surface coating of iodine vapour. After a long exposure in the camera, the image was developed over heated mercury and fixed in a common salt solution. The image lies on a mirror-like surface and is best seen from an angle to minimise reflections. The surface of daguerreotypes is delicate and easily damaged, so professionally finished images were presented in a protective case or frame.

A stereograph is composed of two pictures mounted next to each other, viewed with a set of lenses known as a stereoscope. Taken around 7cm apart, roughly corresponding to the spacing of the eyes, the left picture represents what the left eye would see, and likewise for the right, so when observing the pictures through a stereoscopic viewer, the pair of photographs converge into a single three-dimensional image.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitlePhotographer's female model (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Stereoscopic Daguerreotype; glass, case of wood and material
Brief description
Anonymous stereoscopic daguerreotype of a photographer's female model. Probably British or French, ca. 1850s.
Physical description
Stereoscopic daguerreotype of a lady wearing a hat, shawl and full skirt seated next to an urn.
Dimensions
  • Overall height: 8.7cm
  • Overall width: 8.7cm
  • Each image height: 6.6cm
  • Each image width: 5.7cm
Object history
Provenance: found in collection.
Subjects depicted
Summary
The daguerreotype process was introduced to the public in 1839 by Frenchman Louis Daguerre, and was hugely popular as a medium for portraiture until the middle of the 1850s. To create a daguerreotype, a silver plated sheet was given a light sensitive surface coating of iodine vapour. After a long exposure in the camera, the image was developed over heated mercury and fixed in a common salt solution. The image lies on a mirror-like surface and is best seen from an angle to minimise reflections. The surface of daguerreotypes is delicate and easily damaged, so professionally finished images were presented in a protective case or frame.

A stereograph is composed of two pictures mounted next to each other, viewed with a set of lenses known as a stereoscope. Taken around 7cm apart, roughly corresponding to the spacing of the eyes, the left picture represents what the left eye would see, and likewise for the right, so when observing the pictures through a stereoscopic viewer, the pair of photographs converge into a single three-dimensional image.
Bibliographic reference
Gernsheim, Helmut and Gernsheim, Alison. L. J. M. Daguerre: the history of the diorama and the daguerreotype. London, Secker & Warburg, 1956, plate 95.
Collection
Accession number
E.1208-1992

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Record createdJune 1, 2004
Record URL
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