Alexandre Bertrand
[Postmortem Portrait of a Child]

CultureFrench
Titles
  • [Postmortem Portrait of a Child]
Datemid-1850s
MediumDaguerreotype with applied color
DimensionsAt opening: 4 5/16 × 5 11/16 in. (11 × 14.5 cm)
Credit LineMuseum purchase funded by Krista and Michael Dumas
Object number2015.493
Not on view

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Department
Photography
Object Type
DescriptionWith the invention of photography in 1839, an entire class that had never before been able to afford portraiture was offered some small degree of immortality, allowing them to leave behind a record of their faces for future generations. The practice of postmortem photography developed to preserve forever the visual memory of deceased loved ones. At a time when the rate of child mortality was high (nearly a third of French children died before the age of five in the 1850s), it was common practice to “secure the shadow ere the substance fade.” In the years when most people did not yet have their own cameras, a daguerreotypist was often called in to fix an image of a child appearing to sleep peacefully, with a bit of pinkish pigment applied on the daguerreotype to give the cheeks a healthy, living appearance.
ProvenanceSale, Ader Nordmann, Paris, November 15, 2015, lot 78; MFAH, 2015.
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
Verso of framed image a printed advertising label: 34, Rue Dauphine, à Paris / MAISON SPÉCIALE POUR LES PORTRAITS / Au Daguerrèotype, fondèe en 1846 / PAR A. BERTRAND, PHOTOGRAPHE, / BREVET D'INVENTION S.G.D.G.[see accession file for complete text]

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