Monday, November 12, 2018

Albumen Prints at the Metropolitan Museum (One)

Gustave Le Gray
Fontainebleau - Chemin sablonneux montant
ca. 1856
albumen silver print from glass negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Francis Frith
Cedars of Lebanon
ca. 1857
albumen silver print from glass negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Désiré Charnay
Baobab à Mohéli
1863
albumen silver print from glass negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Constant Alexandre Famin
Man in Forest Landscape
ca. 1870
albumen silver print from glass negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

September Twilight

I gathered you together,
I can dispense with you –

I'm tired of you, chaos
of the living world –
I can only extend myself
for so long to a living thing.

I summoned you into existence
by opening my mouth, by lifting
my little finger, shimmering

blues of the wild
aster, blossom
of the lily, immense,
gold-veined –

you come and go; eventually
I forget your names.

You come and go, every one of you
flawed in some way,
in some way compromised: you are worth
one life, no more than that.

I gathered you together;
I can erase you
as though you were a draft to be thrown away,
an exercise

because I've finished you, vision
of deepest mourning.

– Louise Glück, from The Wild Iris (Ecco Press, 1992)

Thomas Davies
Wood Scene - Norton, Cheshire
1856
albumen silver print
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Horatio Ross
Tree
ca. 1858
albumen silver print from glass negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Eugène Chauvigné
Roses
ca. 1875
albumen silver print from glass negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Thomas George Mackinlay
Study for a Picture
1856
albumen silver print
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

William Notman
Still Life with Books
ca. 1870-90
albumen silver print from glass negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Parable of the Dove

A dove lived in a village.
When it opened its mouth
sweetness came out, sound
like a silver light around
the cherry bough. But
the dove wasn't satisfied.

It saw the villagers
gathered to listen under
the blossoming tree.
It didn't think: I
am higher than they are.
It wanted to walk among them,
to experience the violence of human feeling,
in part for its song's sake.

So it became human.
It found passion, it found violence,
first conflated, then
as separate emotions
and these were not
contained by music. Thus
its song changed,
the sweet notes of its longing to be human
soured and flattened. Then

the world drew back; the mutant
fell from love
as from the cherry branch,
it fell stained with the bloody
fruit of the tree.

So it is true after all, not merely
a rule of art:
change your form and you change your nature.
And time does this to us.

– Louise Glück, from Meadowlands (HarperCollins, 1996)

Hippolyte Bayard
Still Life with Statuary
ca. 1850-55
albumen silver print from glass negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Robert Macpherson
The Hermaphrodite
ca. 1861
albumen silver print from glass negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Stephen Thompson
Satyr - British Museum
ca. 1869-72
albumen silver print from glass negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Edmond Bénard
Sculptor Emmanuel Frémiet in his Studio
ca. 1880-90
albumen silver print from glass negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Edmond Bénard
Artist François Flameng in his Studio
ca. 1880-90
albumen silver print from glass negative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York