Enigmatic Daguerreotype Portraits from 1840-1860 Daguerreotypes were primarily used for portraits from 1840 1860. Daguerreotype images tended to be weak until 1840 when a method to enhance the image with A Daguerreotype Portrait from 1840. 8772899115 examines the form, production, and history of this enigmatic depiction of the artist in his final The daguerreotypes below are from the studio of Matthew Brady, one of the most celebrated 19th century American photographers, best known for his portraitsA beautiful and sublime glimpse into the past The
daguerreotypes below are from the studio of
Matthew Brady, one of the most celebrated 19th century American photographers, best known for his portraits of celebrities and his documentation of the American Civil War which earned him the title of “father of photojournalism”.
The Library of Congress received the majority of the Brady daguerreotypes as a gift from the Army War College in 1920. [via
publicdomainreview]


Unidentified man, about 30 years of age. Photographed between 1844 - 1860

Unidentified woman, about 20 years of age (taken between 1851 and 1860)


Unidentified U.S. Army officer

James Buchanan
Portrait of unidentified man [between 1844 and 1860], by Mathew Brady’s studio.

Bishop Frederic Baraga holding his Dictionary of the Otchipwe Language



William Cullen Bryant


William C. Dawson




James Duncan

Asher Brown Durand

Memucan Hunt

John M. Washington


Zachary Taylor and his cabinet, all seated except President Taylor Left to right: William Ballard Preston, Secretary of the Navy; Thomas Ewing, Secretary of the Interior; John Middleton Clayton, Secretary of State; Zachary Taylor, Twelfth President of the United States; William Morris Meredith, Secretary of the Treasury; George Washington Crawford, Secretary of War; Jacob Collamer, Postmaster General; Reverdy Johnson, Attorney General.
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