On view

Photography

Eliza Middleton,

1847

Walter B. Eastman, active 1847–1860, Boston, MA
Plumbe National Daguerrian Gallery, active 1840s, Boston, MA
2016-87

More Context

Didactics

This plate came from the studio of John Plumbe Jr., one of the earliest American daguerreotypists. The name Eliza Middleton, inscribed in pencil on the leather case, provides the name of the female sitter, who adopts a pose of contemplation and is finely attired, with multiple pieces of jewelry brought to life by hand-coloring. By the 1840s, Boston was home to a large African American community, whose roots date back to the Revolutionary era, and Eliza Middleton was likely one of the roughly two thousand free people of color in Boston. Because early photographs of African Americans are rare, and those that survive tend to depict enslaved people, this object serves as an important historical and cultural relic.<br>

Information

Title
Eliza Middleton
Dates

1847

Medium
Daguerreotype
Dimensions
5.1 × 6.3 cm (2 × 2 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Fowler McCormick, Class of 1921, Fund
Object Number
2016-87
Place Made

North America, United States, Massachusetts, Boston

Inscription
Inscribed in graphite on leather case: Eliza Middleton Printed price list on verso: Plumbe National Daguerrian Gallery, 75 Court Street, Boston, W.B. Eastman, Proprietor.
Culture
Materials
Techniques

[Heritage Auctions]; [purchased by William Reese Company, New Temple, CT, 2015]; purchased by the Princeton University Art Museum, 2016.