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Photographing the baby. [graphic].
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Printed and Graphic Ephemera
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Details
Creator
National Bank Note Co.
Title
Photographing the baby. [graphic].
Publisher
New York : National Bank Note Co. lithd
Publisher
N.Y. New York. 1890
Date
[ca. 1890]
Physical Description
1 print : chromolithograph ; sheet 8 x 11 cm (3.25 x 4.25 in.)
Description
Trade card after an 1870 Sol Eytinge Harper's Weekly illustration with white figures depicting a racist, caricaturized genre scene to promote the coach varnish firm Clarence Brooks & Co. Scene shows a white photographer taking the portrait of an African American toddler in hi studio. The African American figures are portrayed with caricatured and exagerrated features. In the right, the white photographer stands next to his camera and tripod. He holds a cloth in his right hand, at his side, and a yellow-colored, monkey-like string puppet in his raised left hand. He wears a beard and is attired in a long brown jacket and blue striped pants. Between him and his young sitter is a framed advertisement above maroon paneling on an olive-colored wall. The advertisement reads: "Clarence Brooks & Co., Fine Coach Varnishes, Cor. West & West 12th Sts." In the left, the African American girl sits stiffly on a plush, green arm chair. Her eyes are opened wide in a surprised expression. She wears a sleeveless pink dress with blue bows at the shoulders. Behind her, in the doorway, are two African American women. The younger woman, likely to be perceived as the girl's mother, peers around from the left of the doorway. She wears a stylish hat, white blouse, and red bow at her neck. An older woman, likely to be perceived as the girl's grandmother, stands in the right of the doorway. She wears a brown-colored bonnet with a large bow around her chin and a brown-colored dress and shawl. Clarence Brooks established his varnish business in 1859 as Brooks and Fitzgerald, later Clarence Brooks & Co. In the early 1880s the firm issued calendars illustrated with African American caricatures in genre scenes, often after Sol Eytinge Harper's Weekly illustrations.
Notes
Title from item.
Publication date inferred from dates of activity of publisher (1888-1892) as cited in Jay Last, The Color Explosion (Santa Ana: Hillcrest Press, 2005).
Purchased with funds for the Visual Culture Program (Junto 2015).
Housed with the Emily Phillips Advertising Card Collection.
RVCDC
Description revised 2022.
Access points revised 2022.
Subject
Clarence Brooks & Co.
African American girls -- Caricatures and cartoons.
African American grandmothers -- Caricatures and cartoons.
African American mothers -- Caricatures and cartoons.
African Americans -- Caricatures and cartoons.
African Americans -- Clothing & dress.
Cameras.
Photographers.
Photographic studios.
Portrait photography.
Racism in popular culture.
Varnishing industry -- New York (State) -- New York.
African Americans -- Satire.
Genre
Trade cards -- 1880-1890.
Chromolithographs -- 1880-1890.
Satires (Visual works) -- 1880-1890.
Location
Library Company of Philadelphia| Print Department| trade card - Brooks [P.2016.17.1]
Accession number
P.2016.17.1
In Collections
Printed and Graphic Ephemera
Trade Card Collection
African American History Prints and Watercolors and Drawings
Race and Visual Culture Digital Collection, 1866-1900
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