Post-mortem Portrait of an Old Woman

anonymous, 1850

We can hardly imagine how slow the daguerreotype process was. The long exposure time can be sensed in the sitters’ faces: concentrated looks, each and every wrinkle engraved on the plate. That makes these photos so magical. With living sitters, their heads were sometimes fixed in a device to keep them still. This was unnecessary for post-mortem photography – a 19th-century practice to immortalize the dead.

  • Artwork typephotograph
  • Object numberRP-F-F14377
  • Dimensionsheight 53 mm x width 68 mm, height 93 mm x width 81 mm x thickness 14 mm
  • Physical characteristicsdaguerreotypie; in leren etui met fluwelen voering

Identification

  • Title(s)

    Post-mortem Portrait of an Old Woman

  • Object type

  • Object number

    RP-F-F14377


Creation

  • Creation

    photographer: anonymous

  • Dating

    1850

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Material and technique

  • Physical description

    daguerreotypie; in leren etui met fluwelen voering

  • Dimensions

    • height 53 mm x width 68 mm
    • height 93 mm x width 81 mm x thickness 14 mm

This work is about

  • Subject


Acquisition and rights


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