Another Halloween weekend thread:
A common practice during the 19th Century and even into the early 20th Century, post-mortem photography provided a family with a memento of the deceased. . .sometimes the only picture ever taken of someone.
Early examples were rather bare bones (if you'll forgive the expression) and the deceased was simply dressed in everyday clothes and photographed in their deathbed.
Towards the end of the 19th Century, a more artistic attitude was adopted, with elaborate wake parlours set up in the home. A large bed was often the center piece displaying the deceased and the room was outfitted with heavy drapes, fragrant flowers and articles from their lives. . .if a child, perhaps toys & dolls. If an adult, favorite books. The deceased was arranged on the bed, wearing nightclothes and covered with bedspreads, photographed to look as if they were simply sleeping.
Small children were often photographed in their parents arms or in a crib surrounded by toys.
Spouses or family members were similarly pictured with the deceased, usually sitting in a chair next to the bed or holding hands.Families who died of sickness or were murdered were often photographed together, lying side by side on a bed.
As the pictures became more and more posed, it was not uncommon for everything in them to be highly symbolic. In this photograph, parents hold their dead child. The father is stoic, the mother holding her head in grief. On the table next to them, different medicine bottles are laid out - they were of no help.
A common practice during the 19th Century and even into the early 20th Century, post-mortem photography provided a family with a memento of the deceased. . .sometimes the only picture ever taken of someone.
Early examples were rather bare bones (if you'll forgive the expression) and the deceased was simply dressed in everyday clothes and photographed in their deathbed.
Towards the end of the 19th Century, a more artistic attitude was adopted, with elaborate wake parlours set up in the home. A large bed was often the center piece displaying the deceased and the room was outfitted with heavy drapes, fragrant flowers and articles from their lives. . .if a child, perhaps toys & dolls. If an adult, favorite books. The deceased was arranged on the bed, wearing nightclothes and covered with bedspreads, photographed to look as if they were simply sleeping.
Small children were often photographed in their parents arms or in a crib surrounded by toys.
Spouses or family members were similarly pictured with the deceased, usually sitting in a chair next to the bed or holding hands.Families who died of sickness or were murdered were often photographed together, lying side by side on a bed.
As the pictures became more and more posed, it was not uncommon for everything in them to be highly symbolic. In this photograph, parents hold their dead child. The father is stoic, the mother holding her head in grief. On the table next to them, different medicine bottles are laid out - they were of no help.