but way back photography was not as easy as it is today,
especially photographing babies, the subject in this case, the child, had to sit still, photograph credit: Anonymous work, XIX век, Public Domain, accessed via Wikimedia Commons, the first
form of photograph available to the masses was the daguerreotype. Invented
by Louis Daguerre in 1839, it was highly popular in the
1840s and 1850s, a piece of silver-plated copper was polished until it was as
smooth as a mirror, and then light-sensitive chemicals were applied to the
surface,
photograph credit: Anonymous work, XIX век, Public Domain, accessed via Wikimedia Commons, this plate was then put into a camera ready for use. The shutter would be opened, exposing the plate to the light for as long as necessary to capture the scene, the key phrase here is “as long as necessary” because on a bright, sunny day, the plate might need only a few seconds of exposure before the chemicals could capture the image. However, if the subject was in a dimly lit room, the exposure time might need to be anywhere from 30 seconds to a couple of minutes,
photograph credit, collection
of Lee Marks and John C. DePrez Jr., Shelbyville, INdiana (left, center);
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Gift of Lee Marks and John C. DePrez Jr.
(2019.1841) (right), the baby is obviously going to move and spoil the photograph, the solution? Put the baby on its mothers lap, but the mother often did not wish to appear in the photograph, hence in many photographs of the time there is a sinister shape behind the child, the mother hidden under a blanket!
photograph credit: Неизвестный фотограф II половины XIX века, Public Domain, accessed via
Wikimedia Commons, if the
child really wouldn’t sit still except on its mother’s lap wearing a blanket, then there was no
option but to have the mother herself in the picture but concealed somehow. The
resulting image could look quite bizarre, depending on the choices made. In
some cases, photographers would just put a blanket over the mother’s head but
otherwise leave her in shot. The viewer can see her, but she’s not strictly
part of the picture,
photograph credit: Museum of
Fine Arts, Boston, Gift of Lee Marks and John C. DePrez, Jr. (2019.1876),
(2019.1838), sometime in the 2010s, public interest in hidden mother
photography spiked as various images were shared on the internet. After that,
both professional photographers and amateurs started forming collections, in
2013, Italian-Swedish artist Linda Fregni Nagler collected together 997
photographs that not only went on display at the 55th Venice Biennale, but
also appeared in a book entitled The Hidden Mother, commenting on the reasons why mothers
might go to such lengths not to be in photographs, Nagler said: “The mothers
seem to have been aiming to create an intimate bond between the child and the
viewer, rather than between themselves and the child.” photographer Laura
Larson was another person to produce a book dedicated to the hidden mother.
After touring with an exhibition of 35 hidden mother photographs in
2014-5, Larson’s book Hidden Mother was published in 2017,
Hidden Mother interwove Victorian pictures with Larson’s story of adopting
her own daughter from Ethiopia. The book was shortlisted for the Paris
Photo-Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Award, back to today just a quick ‘click’ and
the photograph is made, as far as photography is concerned, we have never had it
so good!
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