Re: Is this a victorian post-mortem photo ???

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I don't think they're dead at all. Many older images show pretty blank expressions on the subjects as a means of keeping them still during the exposure.

I've seen post-mortem images and there's really no mistaking them; the subjects are often in coffins or laid out in such a way as to not be mistaken for dead.

These two look very much alive.

Lovely image, I think.

Lea

On Jan 8, 2007, at 5:59 PM, Charles Dias wrote:

 Hi,

 Sometime ago I bought in a flee market an old photo that I think maybe it is one of the famous victorian style post-mortem photos.
 
 I scanned and you can see it here:

http://img412.imageshack.us/img412/5534/sisterszo2.jpg

 The photo shows too girls, sisters, both standing up, the little one over a chair to achieve the hight of the older one.  The writings in italian says it's a photo sent to a man and both are their sisters named Riccia (?) and Teca. This photo was made around 1910 in a famous portraiture studio in Firenzi (Italy) named Cav.A. Cattani and Figli.

 Take a look in these details I think points one or both girls maybe is dead:

1 - The vague expressions and fixed eyes;

2 - The unnatural pose of the older girl;

3 - The white stands behind the girls (used to support the dead bodies standing up).

 Maybe I'm completly wrong and it's just a common portrait of living people and the details I pointed is just due to the long exposures required than.

 Looking forward your opinion,

 Charles Dias




lea murphy
www.leamurphy.com
www.whinydogpress.com




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