[Group of Betsimisaraka women]

Getty Museum

[Group of Betsimisaraka women]

Creator

Désiré Charnay

French Photographer · 1828–1915

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Author

As an adventurous young schoolteacher in New Orleans, Claude-Joseph Désiré Charnay decided to become an explorer. After a brief return to his native France and a tour of the United States, he set off on his first expeditionary sojourn in 1857 to Mexico, where he photographed pre-Columbian ruins. In 1863 he spent three months on the island of Madagascar off the southeastern coast of Africa as a wri

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Date
1863
Medium
Albumen silver print
Culture
French
Department
Photographs
Institution
Getty Museum

Claude-Joseph Désiré Charnay went to Madagascar in 1863 as part of a government-sponsored expedition to extend French political influence there. When Charnay's party left France, there was a pro-French prince on the throne in Madagascar; by the time they arrived, the prince had been assassinated and the new government had reinstated an official policy of resistance to the French presence. In this tense environment Charnay made photographs of native individuals and ethnic types. As an anthropologist, he was interested in their physical appearance and costumes more than their individual identities. The population of Madagascar was made up of the ruling Hova tribe and the native Madegasse, to which group the women pictured here belonged. The three women and the girl stand in the center of the frame, presenting themselves to the camera in silent formality. Charnay was an enthusiastic imperialist who rather patronizingly described the Madegasse as "of a gentle and timid disposition, faithful and devoted." He was successful in getting them to pose, representing the island's colonized population in their finery of French printed cotton.

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