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Touring Turn-of-the-Century America: Photographs from the Detroit Publishing Company, 1880 - 1920 |
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In a hurry? Save or print these Collection Connections as a single file. Go directly to the collection, Touring Turn-of-the-Century America: Photographs from the Detroit Publishing Company, 1880-1920 , in American Memory, or view a Summary of Resources related to the collection. Touring Turn-of-the-Century America: Photographs from the Detroit Publishing Company 1880-1920 can be used for a variety of arts-related projects. Historic photographs provide an opportunity to discuss the importance of composition while reproductions of paintings facilitate art criticism. Many images can also be the basis for creative projects such as writing a newspaper or creating a drawing around a photograph.
Photographic Choices and CompositionPhotographers make a conscious effort to compose an image using their camera. Select a series of images of a single subject (and, if possible, from a single photographer) to study the composition of a photograph and the photographers decisions. Use the following questions as the basis for both a critique and for creating a portfolio of photographs on a subject of your choice.
Drawing Outside the Frame
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A photographer is usually very deliberate in setting up an image. The borders of a picture can isolate a subject from its surroundings or emphasize its relationship to other items within the cameras view. No matter how an image appears in a photograph, however, there is a complete world that exists just beyond the frame. Select a detailed photograph from the collection and print it onto a sheet of paper. Cut and paste this image onto a large sheet of paper and draw what you imagine would surround this scene by drawing around the edges of the photograph. Keep the following questions in mind: |
![]() Cabin John Bridge, Potomac River, Washington, D.C. |
A search on the term painting
produces over 1,000 black-and-white reproductions of both famous and
anonymous paintings. Although these images lack the colors of the originals,
they can still be used to practice image-analysis and to examine an
artist's style and technique. Examine and compare works by artists such
as John
Singer Sargent and William
Sergeant Kendall and answer the following questions:
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![]() William Kendall Sargent's "Alison." |
The photographs in this collection can serve as a catalyst for various creative-writing projects:
![]() A Scene After the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake From Market Street.
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Imagine that you are a reporter for a nineteenth-century newspaper. Browse the collection and select a topic such as the Spanish-American War or the 1906 California earthquake. Research the general history of the topic and, if possible, the context of a specific image in the collection. Write an article using historical fact and imagined interviews with either the subjects in the photograph or nearby witnesses. A series of articles can be written from different perspectives to cover various aspects of a single event. |
Or, choose a series of scenic images from the collection to document an imaginary journey across the late-nineteenth century U.S. Download and print out the images on recycled file folders to make postcards for the trip. Write messages on the back of the postcards to document your journey from the perspective of a traveler. Keep the following questions in mind.
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| Last updated 09/26/2002 |