Francisca Tejada de
Orendain and daughters, Hipolita and Virginia, Portraits from the Hipolita Orendain de Medina correspondence and miscellany, MSP 1441
|
While today we might
have separate digital albums to display albums of photos to our friends through
Facebook or Flickr, the Victorians made their advances in photographic
technology a fad of their own. The development of being able to have multiple,
identical albumen-print photographs that could be pasted onto uniform, 2 ½-by
4-inch cards transformed possibilities for the distribution of images. While previously
images were exposed directly onto the surface of the object that would become
the "photograph," as in daguerreotypes and tintypes, cartes de visite
came from a single negative, meaning that one could give their portraits to
numerous individuals without multiple sittings. To incentivize the mass consumption
of the new technology—called “cartomania,” as noted by Andrea L. Volpe—people
could purchase photo albums which were specially formatted for cartes de
visite. According to Olivier Debroise, these albums became "an
indispensible object in homes after 1865" and were "exhibited from
time to time" to guests in formal parlor rooms, filled with images of personal
acquaintances and purchased copies of famous public figures. Collecting
photographs became a new form of social "networking."
Beatriz and Adolfo Quevedo, Portraits from the Hipolita Orendain de Medina correspondence and miscellany, MSP 1441 |
Concepcion Navarro de
Camarena and child, Hipolita Orendain de Medina correspondence and miscellany, MSP 1441
|
Pablo Rocha & Portu,
recto and verso, Portraits from the Hipolita Orendain de Medina correspondence and miscellany, MSP 1441
|
Library and Collections
Intern, California Historical Society
Sources
"A Brief History
of the Carte de Visite." The
American Museum of Photography. 2004. Accessed August 14, 2017. http://www.photographymuseum.com/histsw.htm
Debroise, Olivier. Mexican Suite: A History of Photography in
Mexico. Translated by Stella de Sá
Rago. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 2001.
No Rooms of Their Own: Women Writers of Early
California, 1849-1869. Edited by Ida
Rae Egli. Berkeley, CA: Heyday Books, 1997.
Shields, David S.
"Buying and Selling Cabinet Cards 1865-1905." Broadway Photographs. Accessed August 14, 2017. http://broadway.cas.sc.edu/content/buying-and-selling-cabinet-cards-1865-1905
Volpe, Andrea L.
"The Cartes de Visite Craze," The
New York Times. August 6, 2013.
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