Post-mortem photography was a way for families in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to obtain a visual remembrance of their loved ones. For most families in the early nineteenth century, these portraits were the only personal photographs they owned. Post-mortem photographs were kept within the family and hidden within luxurious daguerreotypes, it was uncommon to share these personal photographs although they were once one of the most popular photographs to take in America. Early forms of “mourning portraits”creatively staged the deceased outside of their coffins to look alive or sleeping. In an eerie composition, the body would be posed with his or her living family members. Towards the beginning of the twentieth century, funerary phot...
This paper contributes to the nascent field of the history of photography in Canada, and more specif...
This is a portrait of a postmortem child. Postmortem photographs, sometimes called memorial portrait...
The visual representation of transience, through the exploitation of the symbolic potential of obje...
Post-mortem photography was a way for families in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to obtain a...
This small photograph, although taken across the globe from the previous Swedish Family Photograph (...
With the invention of the daguerreotype in 1839 the posthumous paintings previously made for the kin...
Post-mortem photography was a transcendental element in the 19th century, which not only democratize...
After her father died, the girl in the photo above went through a highly ritualized and formalized p...
Why would we ever take a picture of a dead person? This practice began as a way to perpetuate the im...
Examining a spectrum of post-mortem images, this volume considers what death photography communicate...
In an 1882 article on ‘A Grave Subject’, the photographer George Bradforde wrote: How the relativ...
In an 1882 article on ‘A Grave Subject’, the photographer George Bradforde wrote: How the relatives...
Images of the dead have been made throughout human history in the forms of drawings, carvings, death...
Focusing on a private photographic memorial album held at the University of Colorado Boulder (UCB), ...
This dissertation is focused on a question of the contemporary phenomenon: crisis of death. It conce...
This paper contributes to the nascent field of the history of photography in Canada, and more specif...
This is a portrait of a postmortem child. Postmortem photographs, sometimes called memorial portrait...
The visual representation of transience, through the exploitation of the symbolic potential of obje...
Post-mortem photography was a way for families in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to obtain a...
This small photograph, although taken across the globe from the previous Swedish Family Photograph (...
With the invention of the daguerreotype in 1839 the posthumous paintings previously made for the kin...
Post-mortem photography was a transcendental element in the 19th century, which not only democratize...
After her father died, the girl in the photo above went through a highly ritualized and formalized p...
Why would we ever take a picture of a dead person? This practice began as a way to perpetuate the im...
Examining a spectrum of post-mortem images, this volume considers what death photography communicate...
In an 1882 article on ‘A Grave Subject’, the photographer George Bradforde wrote: How the relativ...
In an 1882 article on ‘A Grave Subject’, the photographer George Bradforde wrote: How the relatives...
Images of the dead have been made throughout human history in the forms of drawings, carvings, death...
Focusing on a private photographic memorial album held at the University of Colorado Boulder (UCB), ...
This dissertation is focused on a question of the contemporary phenomenon: crisis of death. It conce...
This paper contributes to the nascent field of the history of photography in Canada, and more specif...
This is a portrait of a postmortem child. Postmortem photographs, sometimes called memorial portrait...
The visual representation of transience, through the exploitation of the symbolic potential of obje...