Artwork Page for A Bride and Her Bridesmaids

Details / Information for A Bride and Her Bridesmaids

A Bride and Her Bridesmaids

1851 or later
(American, 1808–1901)
(American, 1811–1894)
Culture
America
Measurements
Image: 19.9 x 14.8 cm (7 13/16 x 5 13/16 in.); Case: 21.7 x 16.5 cm (8 9/16 x 6 1/2 in.); Matted: 61 x 50.8 cm (24 x 20 in.)
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Southworth, a druggist, and Hawes, a carpenter and self-taught painter, operated a daguerreotype studio together in Boston that served the city’s elite. Masters of the aesthetic and technical aspects of the medium, they built the first skylight in Boston to supply a clear, strong light in their studio. Another of their innovations was the addition of an extra layer of silver to their plates to enhance the luminosity and level of polish of their daguerreotypes. This medallion portrait is an example of the most difficult and expensive portrait mode of the 1850s. A daguerreotype plate was first masked and then a perforated template was moved around to take separate exposures on the same plate using a mechanism Southworth patented.
A vertically oriented daguerreotype depicts four women with light skin tones wearing wide-skirted nineteenth-century white gowns in a studio interior. Centered, one woman wears a translucent veil and an off-the-shoulder dress with a chest flower. Two women stand to our left and one to our right in similar gowns with dark floral accents. All have dark hair with ringlet curls. They pose amidst a fluted column, draped fabric, and carved furniture.

A Bride and Her Bridesmaids

1851 or later

Josiah Johnson Hawes, Albert Sands Southworth

(American, 1808–1901), (American, 1811–1894)
America

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