African American Portraiture After Emancipation Tintype Photograph of a Black Woman, 19th Century
Photograph
Tintype photograph of an African American woman, 19th century, documenting personal portraiture and self-presentation in the decades following emancipation, with direct relevance to the study of Black identity, social mobility, and visual culture in Reconstruction-era America. The sitter is shown in formal Victorian dress, wearing a full white gown and hat, with hands clasped in her lap, adopting a composed and deliberate pose consistent with studio portrait conventions of the period. Such images formed part of a broader practice in which African Americans used photography to assert dignity, stability, and participation in social norms that had been denied under slavery, creating visual records of family, status, and self-definition during a period of transition and reconstitution of community life.Tintype photograph measuring approximately 2.5 x 3.5 inches, produced using a photographic process introduced in the mid-nineteenth century in which images were created on thin metal sheets coated with dark lacquer. The portrait presents the subject seated against a neutral backdrop, her attire and posture carefully arranged to emphasize refinement and composure, with the details of her dress and hat clearly visible above the folds of her skirt.
Corners clipped, with tissue paper attached to the verso and a small chip not affecting the image; overall very good condition. A clear and well-preserved example of nineteenth-century African American portrait photography, reflecting the use of the medium in documenting personal identity and social presence after emancipation.
Item #18474
Price: $500.00
See all items in African American Family & Community Life, Reconstruction & Jim Crow, Photography, Reconstruction & Jim Crow
See all items in African American History, Art, Photography & Visual Culture, Civil Rights
See all items by African American Woman's Tintype