
Unidentified Photographer: Ten Children
Cyanotype, circa 1898
5 x 8 inches
This
image was found with several other photographs apparently
taken in the rural South. The formal pose is a bit
regimented and more commonly used in studio settings, but
the faces of these children show a delightful range of
personalities and responses to the act of being
photographed.
Cyanotypes,
made with the same chemical recipe as architectural
blueprints, were popular around the year 1900. Many
amateur photographers made cyanotypes, but professionals
used the process as well--among them, Frances Benjamin
Johnston, who documented the education of African
Americans at the Hampton Institute in Virginia and at the
Tuskegee Institute in Alabama.
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