Untitled

Art Institute of Chicago

Untitled

O. H. Willard

Date
1850/59
Medium
Salted paper print
Culture
United States
Department
Photography and Media
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

O. H. Willard was a prominent Philadelphia photographer of the 1850s and 1860s, who contributed to general discussions about photography in the professional periodicals of the day. Like others who had started out as daguerreotypists, Willard migrated to the wet collodion (glass plate) process, which offered shorter exposure time and, unlike the unique positive image invented by Daguerre, yielded negatives with theoretically limitless reproducibility. The unknown sitter in this picture engages us with his clear, direct gaze. The print offers an excellent example of stock in trade of the era and suggests how photography could make an ordinary subject captured during a routine commission into a compelling figure.

The authoritative record is held by Art Institute of Chicago. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.

Linked open data

Authority identifiers that link this record into the wider web of cultural data — stable references you can follow to the source.

Object type
AAT300046300

Related across collections

Semantically similar works from Art Institute of Chicago and other institutions.