(5) The photographs of Mathew Brady | History on Film; A portrait of a man who captured a nation in flux.
http://www.economist.com/news/bo ... n-flux-history-film
(book review on Robert Wilson, Mathew Brady; Portraits of a nation. Bloomsbury USA, 2013)
Note:
(a)
(i) Matthew (name)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_(name)
(Translations in other languages: Mathew in English and Welsh)
(ii) Meaning of the Irish surname Brady is "not clear."
(b) "IN 1860 a little-known lawyer travelled to New York to deliver a big speech about slavery and the constitution to the Cooper Institute. A photograph taken a few hours before shows him dressed in black, his waistcoat rumpled, his shirt collar awkwardly arranged around his long neck, his left hand resting on a stack of books. Some years later, after Abraham Lincoln (pictured) was elected president of the divided United States, the photographer, Mathew Brady, was introduced to him as if they had never met. But Lincoln recognised him right away, declaring 'Brady and the Cooper Institute made me president.' Or so Brady claimed."
(i) The way the paragraph is written, which places "(pictured)" behind "Abraham Lincoln" AFTER he was elected, gave me the impression that the photo of Lincoln above the Economist book review was taken following the election. BESIDES the photo was a bit too dark, unable to show details of his "crumpled" waistcoat. However, the Economist photo was taken Feb 27, 1860 all right. See next.
(ii) Cooper Union speech
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooper_Union_speech
(section 5 External links: Text of the speech)
(iii) Cooper Union
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooper_Union
(Founded in 1859, and inspired in 1830 when [American industrialist] Peter Cooper learned about the government-supported École Polytechnique of Paris [established during the French Revolution in 1794 by Gaspard Monge, a French Mathematician; tuition-free for French nationals]; as of April 23, 2013, due to financial concerns, that policy [of full-tuition scholarship, "a landmark in American history" (this Wiki page)] has been eliminated beginning with the class entering in the Fall of 2014)
(iv) In the photo, President Lincoln wore a waistcoat underneath frock coat (both black).
(A) waistcoat
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waistcoat
(commonly called a vest in American English)
(B) frock coat
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frock_coat
(c) "As striking as his portrait of Lincoln is one he took of the defeated General Robert E Lee just after the Confederacy’s surrender in 1865. Brady perfectly captured Lee’s steady, sad gaze. Studio portraiture in those days was a slow business, of long exposures and iron frames to hold heads still."
(i) Robert E Lee and Mathew Brady. History Replays Today, Apr 1, 2012 (podcast).
http://www.historyreplaystoday.c ... d-mathew-brady.html
("He [Lee] reluctantly agreed to the meeting with Matthew Brady four days later on April 20, 1865")
(ii) About Mathew Brady. Son of the South, undated (blog)
http://www.sonofthesouth.net/lee ... 0Mathew%20Brady.htm
("Mathew Brady Photograph of [a standing] Robert E Lee Taken just days after the end of the Civil War[.] Brady took six photos, five of which survived")
(iii) There was also this photo of a sitting Lee (flanked by his son and an aide), in a slightly different pose than the one in (i).
(iv) photography
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photography
(section 2.2 First camera photography (1820s): Invented in the first decades of the 19th century * * *In March 1851, Frederick Scott Archer published his findings in "The Chemist" on the wet plate collodion process. This became the most widely used process between 1852 and the late 1860s when the dry plate was introduced)
(d) "Rather unusually, he [Brady] often included himself in the wings of his photographs. With his distinctive little glasses and broad-brimmed hat, he acted as a proxy for the viewer’s gaze."
(i) Mathew Brady
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathew_Brady
(c 1822-1896)
shows him in glasses.
(ii) Mathew Brady ~The father of Photojournalism. Anthony Luke's Not-Just-Another-photoblog Blog, May 26, 2011.
http://anthonylukephotography.bl ... ther-of-modern.html
Photos 3 and 4 has him with and without a hat.
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