True Pictures

True Pic­tures”: Fred­er­ick Dou­glass on the Promise of Pho­tog­ra­phy
Gre­gory Fried, Suf­folk University

Man is the only picture-making ani­mal in the world. He alone of all the inhab­i­tants of the earth has the capac­ity and pas­sion for pic­tures … Poets, prophets, and reform­ers are all picture-makers, and this abil­ity is the secret of their power and achieve­ments: they see what ought to be by the reflec­tion of what is, and endeavor to remove the
contradiction.

–Fred­er­ick Douglass

 

Fig. 1. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown: sub­jects unknown (box­ers), quar­ter plate ambrotype,
c. 1860–65. Col­lec­tion of Greg French.

In the late sum­mer of 1839, at an extra­or­di­nary joint meet­ing of the Acad­emy of Sci­ence and the Acad­emy of Fine Arts in Paris, Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre pre­sented to the pub­lic and to the world the first truly suc­cess­ful pho­to­graphic process: the daguerreo­type. It is hard for us to grasp now, after more than 160 years of pho­tog­ra­phy, the aston­ish­ment and enthu­si­asm that greeted Daguerre’s dis­cov­ery. On a small plate of metal, Daguerre coaxed the sun’s rays, guided by the lens of a cam­era, to pro­duce an image whose detail was as minutely faith­ful to real­ity as the reflec­tion in a mirror–only in black and white. In an age of soar­ing expec­ta­tions of sci­ence, the daguerreo­type sym­bol­ized the pos­si­bil­ity that human inge­nu­ity might cap­ture the very essence of nature.

The daguerreo­type is truly a mar­vel: strictly speak­ing, it is impos­si­ble to repro­duce one, since a daguerreo­type image sits on a sil­ver sur­face that reflects like a mir­ror; one there­fore sees one­self in the image, too. The only way to appre­ci­ate a daguerreo­type prop­erly is to see it, as it were, in per­son. This per­sonal inti­macy and imme­di­acy lent much of the fer­vor to what Fred­er­ick Dou­glass called the new “pas­sion for pic­tures.” While the inven­tor of the daguerreo­type was a French­man, nowhere did this pas­sion catch on as it did in the still young United States. For Dou­glass, the for­mer slave and abo­li­tion­ist ora­tor, pho­tog­ra­phy, as a mir­ror of real­ity, would serve as a new weapon in the fight for
free­dom and human dignity.

Samuel F. B. Morse, the Amer­i­can inven­tor and painter, hap­pened to be in Paris in 1838–39 to pro­mote his own inven­tion, the elec­tro­mag­netic tele­graph. There he met and befriended Daguerre. Morse tried his hand at the process as soon as Daguerre made it pub­lic, and, on his return to the States, he suc­cess­fully spread word of Daguerre’s genius to his fel­low Amer­i­cans. Scores, then hun­dreds, and finally thou­sands of Amer­i­can
prac­ti­tion­ers took up the art, improv­ing the tech­nique so rapidly that by the early 1840s a skill­ful daguerreo­typ­ist could earn a respectable income as a por­traitist. The Amer­i­can pub­lic hun­gered unre­lent­ingly for por­traits. Dou­glass explains this pas­sion well: “The great dis­cov­erer of mod­ern times, to whom com­ing gen­er­a­tions will award spe­cial homage,
will be Daguerre. Morse has brought the seeds of the earth together, and Daguerre has made it a pic­ture gallery. We have pic­tures, true pic­tures, of every object which can inter­est us … What was once the spe­cial and exclu­sive lux­ury of the rich and great is now the priv­i­lege of all. The hum­blest ser­vant girl may now pos­sess a pic­ture of her­self such as
the wealth of kings could not pur­chase fifty years ago.”

By the 1850s and 1860s, Amer­i­can inge­nu­ity had led to an explo­sion of pho­to­graphic tech­niques includ­ing the ambrotype, tin­type, and carte de visite–all to feed the end­less Amer­i­can appetite for por­traits. Tens of mil­lions of images were pro­duced. Once, por­trai­ture had been the “spe­cial and exclu­sive lux­ury” of the rich or the noble in the form of paint­ings or sculp­tures that cost a small for­tune to com­mis­sion; now Amer­i­cans
could assert their egal­i­tar­i­an­ism in self-representation. For a day’s wages, even a mill worker could con­firm her dig­nity and make her bid for immor­tal­ity (fig. 2).

Fig.
2. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown: sub­jects unknown
(mill work­ers in Winooski, Ver­mont), tin­type, c. 1875.
Col­lec­tion of Gre­gory Fried.

 

 

 

 

As Fred­er­ick Dou­glass saw it, Morse and Daguerre were two facets of the same democ­ra­tiz­ing rev­o­lu­tion, a rev­o­lu­tion that was fast unit­ing the world in com­mu­ni­ca­tion (Morse) and in image (Daguerre). For Dou­glass, this uni­ver­sal­iz­ing and democ­ra­tiz­ing rev­o­lu­tion involved more than a break­ing down of class divi­sions; it also meant attack­ing what we might call the optics of racism, that is, how white Euro­peans had come to see
black Africans as a nearly sep­a­rate species, a view which cor­rupted painted por­traits: “Negroes can never have impar­tial por­traits at the hands of white artists. It seems to us next to impos­si­ble for white men to take like­nesses of black men, with­out most grossly exag­ger­at­ing their dis­tinc­tive fea­tures. And the rea­son is obvi­ous. Artists, like all other
white per­sons, have adopted a the­ory respect­ing the dis­tinc­tive fea­tures of Negro physiognomy.”

When Dou­glass com­plained about how white artists “take like­nesses” of blacks, he meant painters, sculp­tors, and engravers–all artists except pho­tog­ra­phers, because in all other art forms, the artist’s pre­con­ceived way of see­ing nec­es­sar­ily intrudes upon the rep­re­sen­ta­tion of the sub­ject mat­ter. In voic­ing this com­plaint, Dou­glass echoed a widely held notion about pho­tog­ra­phy, one that per­sists to this day: that unlike other tech­niques
in art, pho­tog­ra­phy is a true mir­ror of nature whose method, because it relies on the non­par­ti­san effec­tive­ness of rays of light rather than the hand of human beings, can present us with what Dou­glass calls “true pic­tures” of reality.

Many con­tem­po­rary the­o­rists would now ques­tion that assump­tion. They would claim that pho­tog­ra­phy is more art than sci­ence by point­ing to how the sub­ject mat­ter is arranged, how the light­ing is manip­u­lated, to what type of lens or printing-out paper is employed, even to the way the scene is com­posed and framed. All these fac­tors play as much of a
sub­jec­tive role in pro­duc­ing and see­ing the work of art as does the hand of the artist with a paint brush or a mal­let and chisel. The pho­to­graph, then, is no more a “true pic­ture” of real­ity than a cubist paint­ing by Picasso.

But, at least for now, let us give Dou­glass the ben­e­fit of the doubt. After all, there is for most of us, in our pre-theoretical expe­ri­ence of pho­tog­ra­phy, some­thing of that expe­ri­ence of imme­di­acy and rev­e­la­tion of real­ity that so aston­ished and inspired him, as well as so many other Amer­i­cans, a cen­tury and a half ago.

Fig.
3. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown:

Fred­er­ick Dou­glass, sixth plate daguerreo­type, c. 1845.
Col­lec­tion of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

Dou­glass was pho­tographed often. One of the very ear­li­est known por­traits of him was taken in the mid-1840s, prob­a­bly just around the time that the pub­li­ca­tion in 1845 of The Nar­ra­tive of the Life of Fred­er­ick Dou­glass, an Amer­i­can Slave Writ­ten by Him­self made Dou­glass a national and then an inter­na­tional celebrity. This aus­tere por­trait of the still youth­ful Dou­glass, who meets our gaze so force­fully, epit­o­mizes his hope and expec­ta­tion
that pho­tog­ra­phy might bestow a pub­lic dig­nity upon African Amer­i­cans that would pro­vide a pic­to­r­ial argu­ment for their inclu­sion in the promise of the Dec­la­ra­tion of Inde­pen­dence: that the only legit­i­mate gov­ern­ment is one that gives sup­port to the self-evident truth that all men are cre­ated equal.

Many other por­traits make the same visual argu­ment, such as this one of an unnamed self-confident horn-player (fig. 4).

Fig. 4. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown: sub­ject unknown,sixth plate daguerreotype, c. 1845–49.
Col­lec­tion of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

 

With his com­pli­cated instru­ment and sheet music, his por­trait pro­claims the capac­ity for refine­ment and self-cultivation. Or con­sider this por­trait of an uniden­ti­fied African Amer­i­can woman whose strength and resilience break through the stiff pose of con­ven­tional por­trai­ture (fig. 5).

Fig. 5. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown: sub­ject unknown, sixth plate daguerreo­type, c. 1847–52.
Col­lec­tion of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

 

These por­traits, and oth­ers such as this one of a man hold­ing a book, show sit­ters who have attained some­thing like middle-class respectabil­ity (fig. 6).

Fig. 6. Hooke and Co. (Fran­cis Hooke, pro­pri­etor):sub­ject unknown, sixth plate daguerreo­type, 1850.Collection of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

 

Other por­traits, such as this 1849 daguer­rotype of a man in his work clothes and an apron (fig. 7) or the por­trait of a fire­man in his gear (fig. 8), illus­trate that African Amer­i­can labor­ers and arti­sans could also afford to show them­selves for who they were, with pride in their trade or their work in pub­lic service.

Fig. 7. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown: sub­ject unknown, sixth plate daguerreotype, c. 1849–55.
Col­lec­tion of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

 

Fig. 8. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown: sub­ject unknown,quar­ter plate tin­type, c. 1860–65.Collection of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

 

When the Civil War broke out, Dou­glass lob­bied Pres­i­dent Lin­coln pas­sion­ately for the right of African Amer­i­cans to bear arms and fight for the Union cause. “I have a right to ask when I … march to the bat­tle field” for “a coun­try or the hope of a coun­try under me, a gov­ern­ment that rec­og­nizes my man­hood around me, and a flag of free­dom wav­ing over me!” By 1863, black reg­i­ments were form­ing and young African Amer­i­can men res­olutely
met the call to arms (fig. 9).

Fig. 9. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown: sub­ject unknown, quar­ter plate ambrotype,
c. 1863–65.
  Col­lec­tion of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

The national strug­gle over the polit­i­cal mean­ing of race found expres­sion in all are­nas of ante­bel­lum visual cul­ture. In The Octoroon, a statue made by John Bell, a naked and appar­ently “white” woman, her arms in chains, her clothes on the pil­lar beside her, bows her head in a sor­row­ful yet dig­ni­fied res­ig­na­tion to inspec­tion before going to the
auc­tion block (fig. 10).

Fig. 10. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown: The Octoroon (from a sculp­ture by John Bell), albu­men print, one half of a stere­o­graph, c. 1870. Col­lec­tion of Gre­gory Fried.

 

 

 

 

 

 

As F. James Davis has explained so well in Who Is Black?, the Amer­i­can cat­e­go­riza­tion of race is unique in the world. By the mid­dle of the nine­teenth cen­tury, in reac­tion to the threat of abo­li­tion and to the fact of inter­breed­ing between whites and blacks, the United States had devel­oped the so-called “one drop rule,” stip­u­lat­ing that even a sin­gle African ances­tor was enough to make a per­son black, not white–and legally a slave if born to a slave mother–no mat­ter how dis­tant that ances­tor or how white-looking the subject.

The Octoroon offers a chal­lenge to the one drop rule by ask­ing white Amer­i­cans, Can’t you see that this per­son, whom the law and social con­ven­tion treats as a slave and nearly another species from us, is in fact just like us? This same visual argu­ment is made in a Civil War era pho­to­graph, “White and Black Slaves” (fig. 11).

Fig. 11. Kim­ball: sub­jects unknown (“White and Black Slaves”),carte de vis­ite, 1863. Col­lec­tion of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

 

The sub­jects here are lib­er­ated slaves from New Orleans–of very dif­fer­ent skin color. The force of the title is the notion that the visual marker of skin color makes no sense as an indi­ca­tor of race–and that, by exten­sion, race itself makes no sense as a con­cept by which to orga­nize soci­ety. “Slaves from New Orleans,” in which a very dark-skinned adult man reads with three lighter-skinned chil­dren, makes the same argu­ment again: race
and skin tone make no dif­fer­ence to the essen­tial and uni­ver­sal dig­nity of human beings, all of whom deserve and are capa­ble of edu­ca­tion and uplift. Pho­tographs like this can teach us about the fun­da­men­tal ambi­gu­ity of race: it is con­ven­tional, not a nat­ural cat­e­gory, but once con­ven­tion gives race a social real­ity, race can make a ter­ri­ble dif­fer­ence (fig.12).

Fig. 12. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown:Wil­son [Chinn], Charley, Rebecca, and Rosa (“Learn­ing Is Wealth”), carte de vis­ite, c. 1863.Collection of Greg French.

 

Some images present dif­fi­cul­ties for Douglass’s hope that pho­tog­ra­phy would serve as an unam­bigu­ous lan­guage of free­dom. For exam­ple, con­sider this por­trait of a slave from Mis­souri (fig. 13).

Fig. 13. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown: sub­ject unknown but iden­ti­fied as Richard’s Fam­ily slave, Mon­ti­cello (Lewis County), Mis­souri, quar­ter plate daguerreotype, c. 1850. Collection of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

 

The elderly man has been posed with a hoe, a sym­bol of his servi­tude, and a bas­ket of  pro­duce at his side. We have to won­der: why did his owner make this por­trait? As a mark of affec­tion for this aging slave? As a token of the master’s wealth and suc­cess? Other por­traits of ser­vants, whether slave or free, also bear wit­ness to a muted strength that speaks at the edges, as it were, of the sub­ject mat­ter of the pho­to­graph. The intended sub­ject of this pho­to­graph (fig. 14) is obvi­ously the wealthy white woman at the cen­ter; she or her fam­ily has paid for this por­trait, and she has come with her dog and her ser­vant to demon­strate her gen­teel sta­tus. The woman’s atten­tion is focused on the dog, not the per­son directly beside her, and yet it is the ser­vant who meets our eye and makes human con­tact, a con­nec­tion that her mis­tress refuses to her.

Fig. 14. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown: sub­jects unknown, quar­ter plate ambrotype,c. 1857–61. Collection of Greg French.

 

Some­thing sim­i­lar takes place in this ante­bel­lum “nanny por­trait,” in which the intended sub­ject is the white child, and the client includes the family’s black slave or ser­vant to indi­cate a class sta­tus: we are rich enough to afford this nanny (fig. 15).

Fig. 15. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown: sub­jects unknown, quar­ter plate ambrotype, c. 1857–61. Collection of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

 

Here, the young nanny (pos­si­bly a slave, pos­si­bly a ser­vant) meets our gaze. Her demeanor, with her hands folded pro­tec­tively across the squirm­ing tod­dler in her lap, is not one of defi­ance but rather of reserved sup­port­ive­ness. But what do we make of the extra­or­di­nary ele­ment of the human hair sealed under the glass, between the brass mat and the image, arranged as a kind of halo around the two fig­ures? Per­haps it is the child’s, but it has the tex­ture of an adult’s hair rather than the wisps of a tod­dler. If the hair is the nanny’s, then, that surely indi­cates the impor­tant place she held in the fam­ily, how­ever subordinate.

Three images from the Civil War era illus­trate the national debate over
the line between black and white (figs. 16, 17, 18).

Fig. 16. Kim­ball: Wil­son Chinn, carte de vis­ite, 1863. Collection of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

 

Fig. 17. Kim­ball: Isaac and Rosa, carte de vis­ite, 1863.
Col­lec­tion of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

 

Fig. 18. Pho­tog­ra­pher unknown: sub­jects unknown, carte de visite, c.1861–65.  Col­lec­tion of Greg French.

 

 

 

 

 

All are cartes de vis­ite, the prod­ucts of a pho­to­graphic process that allowed for mass repro­duc­tion, whether for sale at a profit or for rais­ing char­i­ta­ble funds. Printed text on the reverse of the first two cards–of the branded slave, Wil­son Chinn, and of the eman­ci­pated chil­dren, Isaac and Rosa–reads: “The pro­ceeds from the sale of these Pho­tographs will be devoted exclu­sively to the edu­ca­tion of col­ored peo­ple in the
Depart­ment of the Gulf, now under the com­mand of Major-General Banks.” These
two cards rep­re­sent one con­tem­po­rary inter­pre­ta­tion of the goals of the war: on the one hand, to end the out­rage of slav­ery per­pe­trated on men like Wil­son Chinn (who is, by the way, the same Wil­son as in Fig­ure 12), and, on the other, to right an his­tor­i­cal injus­tice by giv­ing the lib­er­ated slaves a future as pro­duc­tive cit­i­zens of the nation.

The third image is more ambigu­ous. No maker takes credit for it, as the pho­tog­ra­pher Kim­ball does on the other two. The pho­to­graph depicts two youths in hor­ren­dously tat­tered rags. They are almost cer­tainly contrabands–slaves who have taken the oppor­tu­nity of war to escape from their mas­ters to seek refuge with the advanc­ing Union armies. Beneath the por­trait some­one has writ­ten in pen­cil, “All men are cre­ated equal.” This direct quo­ta­tion from the Dec­la­ra­tion of Inde­pen­dence seems to sup­port the abo­li­tion­ist posi­tion on the war–until one turns the card over and reads fur­ther: “This is not exag­ger­ated in the least — : not one out of ten of the nig­gers here, who have run away from their mas­ters (and there are thou­sands of them) can boast of such good clothes. Shove them into the army, I say, and let them do the fight­ing in this hot Depart­ment.” This was prob­a­bly writ­ten by a Union sol­dier who bought the card at the front from a camp mer­chant and sent it home in the mail. His cap­tion about “all men” being cre­ated equal is at best darkly ironic; he clearly refuses to accept equal­ity with these unfor­tu­nates, thereby repu­di­at­ing the ide­al­is­tic inter­pre­ta­tion of the Amer­i­can found­ing as truly uni­ver­sal­is­tic. While Fred­er­ick Dou­glass wanted for­mer slaves to fight to affirm and con­firm their dig­nity and equal­ity as cit­i­zens, this anony­mous writer wants them to fight purely because he sees them as expendable–and pre­cisely because he deems them beneath human dignity.

This is the tragic and endur­ing con­tra­dic­tion of race as rep­re­sented in ante­bel­lum pho­tographs: the same image can arouse at once pity and right­eous indig­na­tion or con­tempt and arro­gant dis­missal. Per­haps it is too much to ask for an image alone to con­quer the prej­u­dices that we bring to bear in our see­ing. Con­sider this tin­type pro­duced around the end of the Civil War period: it depicts a grin­ning white man in black­face
(fig. 19).

Fig. 19. Hath­away:sub­ject unknown, gem tin­type in paper mat, c. 1865.Collection of Gre­gory Fried.

 

 

 

 

 

Although the Jim Crow char­ac­ter as a fea­ture of min­strel shows became pop­u­lar in the gen­er­a­tion before the Civil War, early pho­to­graphic images of peo­ple in black­face are quite rare. Of course, min­strelsy “sees” the dark­ness of the African com­plex­ion. But by appro­pri­at­ing that com­plex­ion and super­im­pos­ing it upon a white face–whose white­ness the viewer is never really meant to forget–all the par­tic­i­pants in the per­for­mance of min­strelsy, both actors and view­ers alike, attempt to make invis­i­ble the human dig­nity of the truly black faces who share their world and whose pres­ence calls out for equality.

The Civil War ended slav­ery, as Dou­glass had hoped, but Recon­struc­tion failed to give for­mer slaves the civic equal­ity that Dou­glass believed the Dec­la­ra­tion of Inde­pen­dence required as due to all human beings. Instead, there descended the long night of Jim Crow seg­re­ga­tion, enforced by the ter­ror of lynching.

Was Fred­er­ick Dou­glass naive to hope for a rev­e­la­tion of human dig­nity from pho­tog­ra­phy? Only if we believe that the fail­ures of the past must be our fail­ures, too. We can look care­fully at these por­traits. We can search in them for the echoes of human pres­ence. We can affirm, cel­e­brate, and restore the hid­den, the neglected, and the anony­mous. In this way, their past can be our present. And our future. Dou­glass said that we can “see what ought to be by the reflec­tion of what is, and endeavor to remove the con­tra­dic­tion,” and surely it is not too late for ide­al­ism like that. We are still the picture-making ani­mal that can envi­sion a future by see­ing the present clearly in reflec­tion on the past.

***

The author wishes to thank his col­league and friend, Greg French, for per­mis­sion to employ so many images from his col­lec­tion. This essay orig­i­nally appeared in the online jour­nal Common-place, vol. 2, no. 2, Jan­u­ary 2002, and is reprinted here with permission.

Fur­ther Reading:

See F. James Davis, Who Is Black? One Nation’s Def­i­n­i­tion (Uni­ver­si­ty­Park, Pa., 1991);  Fred­er­ick Dou­glass, “Life Pic­tures,” holo­graph dated 1861, in The Fred­er­ick Dou­glass Papers, Library of Con­gress, micro­film acces­sion no. 16377, reel 14, frames 394–412; Fred­er­ick Dou­glass, “Pic­tures and Progress,” in John W. Blassingame, ed., The Fred­er­ick Dou­glass Papers, ser. 1, vol. 3 (New Haven, 1979–92); Merry A. For­resta and John Wood, eds., Secrets of the Dark Cham­ber: The Art of the Amer­i­can Daguerreo­type (Wash­ing­ton, D.C., 1995); O. Henry Mace, Col­lec­tors’ Guide to Early Pho­tographs, 2d ed. (Iola, Wis., 1999); Eric Lott, Love and Theft: Black­face Min­strelsy and the Amer­i­can Work­ing Class (New York, 1993); Beau­mont Newhall, The Daguerreo­type in Amer­ica, 3d ed. (New York, 1976) and The His­tory of Pho­tog­ra­phy, 5th ed. (New York, 1994); John Stauf­fer, “Race and
Con­tem­po­rary Pho­tog­ra­phy: Willie Robert Mid­dle­brook and the Legacy of Fred­er­ick Dou­glass,” in John Wood, ed., The Jour­nal of Con­tem­po­rary Pho­tog­ra­phy: Cul­ture and Crit­i­cism (Brew­ster, Mass., n.d.); Colin West­er­beck, “Fred­er­ick Dou­glass Chooses His Moment” in Susan F. Rossen, ed., African Amer­i­cans in Art (Chicago, 1999).

Comments are closed.