(1)索斯沃斯和霍斯的达盖尔照相肖像:克莱蒂、普罗塞福涅和战前波士顿妇女

IF 0.3 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Margo Beggs
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引用次数: 0

摘要

《年轻的美国:索斯沃思和霍斯的银版照相法》(2005年)是一本展示阿尔伯特·桑兹·索斯沃思和乔赛亚·约翰逊·霍斯作品的纪念性展览目录。他们一起在19世纪中期的波士顿建立了一家著名的达盖尔银版照相术工作室,为城市的资产阶级提供服务。这篇论文试图揭开在《年轻的美国》中发现的几十张达盖尔银版照片的神秘面纱,在这些照片中,波士顿的精英女性几乎是裸体的。这些身份不明的女性与索斯沃斯和霍斯精心隐藏的女性尸体形成了鲜明的对比。他们为什么要在相机镜头前这样暴露自己?这篇论文将女性的穿着状态归因于她们有意模仿古典传统中的两个雕塑:古大理石半身像克莱蒂(Clytie)和19世纪中期美国新古典主义雕塑家海拉姆·鲍尔斯(Hiram Powers)的大理石半身像普罗塞福涅(Proserpine)。这一论点首先揭示了在南北战争前的美国,一种普遍的“古典雕像”审美是如何盛行于女性的仪态的,然后证明了克莱蒂和珀耳塞福涅的半身像作为那个时期白人精英女性美的象征具有特殊的意义。接下来,本文阐述了Southworth & Hawes设计了一种特殊的摄影风格,这种风格源自他们自己对这两座雕像的达盖尔照相法,其中女性的露肩披肩被故意掩盖,让他们的女性客户以这些著名雕像的名义摆姿势。论文的结论是,这些图像中的女性可以以这种风格摆姿势,而不会违反社会规范,因为这些神话人物在那个时期被女性和男性解读为反映了19世纪中期“真正女性崇拜”的核心戒律。此外,这些半身像提供了服装模型,强化了女性着装标准,因为它们与阶级和特权有关。然而,在美国南北战争之前,在一个分裂严重的国家,这些女性裸露出无瑕的白皙皮肤,将自己置身于有争议的种族信仰的核心。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
(Un)Dress in Southworth & Hawes’ Daguerreotype Portraits: Clytie, Proserpine, and Antebellum Boston Women
Young America: The Daguerreotypes of Southworth & Hawes (2005) is a monumental exhibition catalogue showcasing the work of Albert Sands Southworth and Josiah Johnson Hawes. Together the partners established a renowned daguerreotype studio in mid-nineteenth-century Boston that catered to the city’s bourgeoisie. This paper seeks to unravel the mystery of dozens of daguerreotypes found in Young America, in which elite Boston women appear to be nearly nude. The unidentified women stand in stark contrast to the carefully concealed bodies of Southworth & Hawes’ other female subjects. Why would they expose themselves in such a manner before the camera’s lens? This paper attributes the women’s state of (un)dress to their deliberate emulation of two sculptures in the classical tradition: Clytie, a marble bust dating to antiquity, and Proserpine, a mid-nineteenth-century marble bust by American neoclassical sculptor Hiram Powers. This argument first reveals how a general “classical statue” aesthetic prevailed for women’s deportment in antebellum America, then demonstrates that the busts of Clytie and Proserpine had special significance as icons of white, elite female beauty in the period. Next, this paper makes the case that Southworth & Hawes devised a special style of photography deriving from their own daguerreotypes of the two statues, in which the women’s off-shoulder drapery was deliberately obscured allowing their female clientele to pose in the guise of these famous statues. The paper concludes by arguing that the women shown in these images could pose in this style without contravening societal norms, as these mythological figures were construed by women and men in the period to reflect the central precepts of the mid-nineteenth-century “Cult of True Womanhood.” Moreover, the busts offered sartorial models that reinforced standards of female dress as they related to class and privilege. By baring their flawless, white skin, however, the women positioned themselves at the crux of contentious beliefs about race in a deeply divided nation prior to the American Civil War.
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来源期刊
International Journal of Fashion Studies
International Journal of Fashion Studies HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
25.00%
发文量
25
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