Photography

The millions of photographs in the Museum's collections compose a vast mosaic of the nation's history. Photographs accompany most artifact collections. Thousands of images document engineering projects, for example, and more record the steel, petroleum, and railroad industries.

Some 150,000 images capture the history, art, and science of photography. Nineteenth-century photography, from its initial development by W. H. F. Talbot and Louis Daguerre, is especially well represented and includes cased images, paper photographs, and apparatus. Glass stereographs and news-service negatives by the Underwood & Underwood firm document life in America between the 1890s and the 1930s. The history of amateur photography and photojournalism are preserved here, along with the work of 20th-century masters such as Richard Avedon and Edward Weston. Thousands of cameras and other equipment represent the technical and business side of the field.

black and white stereograph by George H. Nickerson; printed on verso "NICKERSON, / Provincetown, / Mass."; view from high vantage point overlooking town; church steeple in background at rightCurrently not on view
Description (Brief)
black and white stereograph by George H. Nickerson; printed on verso "NICKERSON, / Provincetown, / Mass."; view from high vantage point overlooking town; church steeple in background at right
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1860s-1880s
maker
Nickerson, George Hathaway
ID Number
2012.3033.0346
nonaccession number
2012.3033
catalog number
2012.3033.0346
Pearl Butler accepts a song request from a young fan. Pearl (1927-1998) and Carl Butler (1927-1992) were part of the honky-tonk and bluegrass music movements before World War II.
Description
Pearl Butler accepts a song request from a young fan. Pearl (1927-1998) and Carl Butler (1927-1992) were part of the honky-tonk and bluegrass music movements before World War II. After their 1962 hit, "Don't Let Me Cross Over," the Butlers became one of the most popular male-female vocal teams in country music.
Location
Currently not on view
negative
1973
print
2003
maker
Horenstein, Henry
ID Number
2003.0169.076
accession number
2003.0169
catalog number
2003.0169.076
maker
Muybridge, Eadweard
ID Number
PG.003856.0896
catalog number
3856.0896
accession number
98473
black and white stereograph mounted on pink cardstock; printed on recto "Providence, R.I.
Description (Brief)
black and white stereograph mounted on pink cardstock; printed on recto "Providence, R.I. / Hacker"; probably by Francis Hacker; image of an old stone gateway with two towers on either side of an open entryway; horse pulling a carriage in gateway; multi-level building in background, plaza filled with people and horses in midground
date made
mid-late 1800s
maker
Hacker, Francis
ID Number
2012.3033.0596
nonaccession number
2012.3033
catalog number
2012.3033.0596
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1885-09-24
maker
Muybridge, Eadweard
ID Number
PG.003856.0728
accession number
98473
catalog number
3856.0728
maker number
1398
With her camera, Lisa Law documented history in the heart of the counterculture revolution of the 1960s as she lived it, as a participant, an agent of change and a member of the broader culture.
Description
With her camera, Lisa Law documented history in the heart of the counterculture revolution of the 1960s as she lived it, as a participant, an agent of change and a member of the broader culture. She recorded this unconventional time of Anti-War demonstrations in California, communes, Love-Ins, peace marches and concerts, as well as her family life as she became a wife and mother. The photographs were collected by William Yeingst and Shannon Perich in a cross-unit collecting collaboration. Together they selected over two hundred photographs relevant to photographic history, cultural history, domestic life and social history.
Law’s portraiture and concert photographs include Bob Dylan, The Beatles, Lovin Spoonful and Peter, Paul and Mary. She also took several of Janis Joplin and her band Big Brother and the Holding Company, including the photograph used to create the poster included in the Smithsonian’s American Art Museum’s exhibition 1001 Days and Nights in American Art. Law and other members of the Hog Farm were involved in the logistics of setting up the well-known musical extravaganza, Woodstock. Her photographs include the teepee poles going into the hold of the plane, a few concert scenes and amenities like the kitchen and medical tent. Other photographs include peace rallies and concerts in Haight-Ashbury, Coretta Scott King speaking at an Anti-War protest and portraits of Allen Ginsburg and Timothy Leary. From her life in New Mexico the photographs include yoga sessions with Yogi Bhajan, bus races, parades and other public events. From life on the New Buffalo Commune, there are many pictures of her family and friends taken during meal preparation and eating, farming, building, playing, giving birth and caring for children.
Ms. Law did not realize how important her photographs were while she was taking them. It was not until after she divorced her husband, left the farm for Santa Fe and began a career as a photographer that she realized the depth of history she recorded. Today, she spends her time writing books, showing her photographs in museums all over the United States and making documentaries. In 1990, her video documentary, “Flashing on the Sixties,” won several awards.
A selection of photographs was featured in the exhibition A Visual Journey: Photographs by Lisa Law, 1964–1971, at the National Museum of American History October 1998-April 1999.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1967
date printed
1998
maker
Law, Lisa
ID Number
1998.0139.054
catalog number
1998.0139.054
accession number
1998.0139
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
2009-11-13
maker
Kunin, Claudia
ID Number
2010.0034.01.06
catalog number
2010.0034.01.06
accession number
2010.0034
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
maker
Garrod, Richard
ID Number
PG.69.76.04
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1944-1945
ID Number
2013.0327.1158
accession number
2013.0327
catalog number
2013.0327.1158
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1884-1886
maker
Muybridge, Eadweard
ID Number
PG.003856.0523
accession number
98473
catalog number
3856.0523
maker number
572
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1884-1886
maker
Muybridge, Eadweard
ID Number
PG.003856.0228
accession number
98473
catalog number
3856.0228
maker number
560
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1924-07-28
maker
Jenkins, C. Francis
ID Number
PG.003752
catalog number
3752
accession number
83549
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1885-07-16
maker
Muybridge, Eadweard
ID Number
PG.003856.0638
accession number
98473
catalog number
3856.0638
maker number
932
With her camera, Lisa Law documented history in the heart of the counterculture revolution of the 1960s as she lived it, as a participant, an agent of change and a member of the broader culture.
Description
With her camera, Lisa Law documented history in the heart of the counterculture revolution of the 1960s as she lived it, as a participant, an agent of change and a member of the broader culture. She recorded this unconventional time of Anti-War demonstrations in California, communes, Love-Ins, peace marches and concerts, as well as her family life as she became a wife and mother. The photographs were collected by William Yeingst and Shannon Perich in a cross-unit collecting collaboration. Together they selected over two hundred photographs relevant to photographic history, cultural history, domestic life and social history.
Law’s portraiture and concert photographs include Bob Dylan, The Beatles, Lovin Spoonful and Peter, Paul and Mary. She also took several of Janis Joplin and her band Big Brother and the Holding Company, including the photograph used to create the poster included in the Smithsonian’s American Art Museum’s exhibition 1001 Days and Nights in American Art. Law and other members of the Hog Farm were involved in the logistics of setting up the well-known musical extravaganza, Woodstock. Her photographs include the teepee poles going into the hold of the plane, a few concert scenes and amenities like the kitchen and medical tent. Other photographs include peace rallies and concerts in Haight-Ashbury, Coretta Scott King speaking at an Anti-War protest and portraits of Allen Ginsburg and Timothy Leary. From her life in New Mexico the photographs include yoga sessions with Yogi Bhajan, bus races, parades and other public events. From life on the New Buffalo Commune, there are many pictures of her family and friends taken during meal preparation and eating, farming, building, playing, giving birth and caring for children.
Ms. Law did not realize how important her photographs were while she was taking them. It was not until after she divorced her husband, left the farm for Santa Fe and began a career as a photographer that she realized the depth of history she recorded. Today, she spends her time writing books, showing her photographs in museums all over the United States and making documentaries. In 1990, her video documentary, “Flashing on the Sixties,” won several awards.
A selection of photographs was featured in the exhibition A Visual Journey: Photographs by Lisa Law, 1964–1971, at the National Museum of American History October 1998-April 1999.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1965
date printed
1997
maker
Law, Lisa
ID Number
1998.0139.028
catalog number
1998.0139.028
accession number
1998.0139
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1885-09-15
maker
Muybridge, Eadweard
ID Number
PG.003856.0142.01
accession number
98473
catalog number
3856.0142.1
maker number
1322
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1949-06
ID Number
2013.0327.1179
accession number
2013.0327
catalog number
2013.0327.1179
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1884-1886
maker
Muybridge, Eadweard
ID Number
PG.003856.0763
accession number
98473
catalog number
3856.0763
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
after 1907
ID Number
1986.3048.1576
nonaccession number
1986.3048
catalog number
1986.3048.1576
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1884-1886
maker
Muybridge, Eadweard
ID Number
PG.003856.0142.02
accession number
98473
catalog number
3856.0142.2
maker number
1323
Glass plate negative made by Walter J. Hussey, 1890. Walter Bracken in a suit and hat on a horse.
Description
Glass plate negative made by Walter J. Hussey, 1890. Walter Bracken in a suit and hat on a horse. Walter Bracken would later be in charge of the Union Pacific Railroad in Nevada.
The collection in the Photographic History Collection consists of over two hundred glass plate negatives made by Walter J. Hussey (1865-1959). These glass plate negatives consist of daily life in and around Mount Pleasant, Ohio, Mr. Hussey's friends and family, studio portraits, his trips to the Washington, D.C. area, and Florida.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1890
maker
Hussey, Walter J.
ID Number
2011.0090.30
accession number
2011.0090
catalog number
2011.0090.30
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1884-1886
maker
Muybridge, Eadweard
ID Number
PG.003856.0464
accession number
98473
catalog number
3856.0464
maker number
1285
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1885-07-21
maker
Muybridge, Eadweard
ID Number
PG.003856.0117
accession number
98473
catalog number
3856.0117
maker number
1375
From Pictorial Artistry: The Dramatization of the Beautiful in PhotographyChristmas! The Spell of Yuletide everywhere… enhanced a thousand-fold for me by the all-blanketing blizzard. Excitedly, the snowflakes whipped and clung to my face and camera like myriad tiny hands.
Description
From Pictorial Artistry: The Dramatization of the Beautiful in Photography
Christmas! The Spell of Yuletide everywhere… enhanced a thousand-fold for me by the all-blanketing blizzard. Excitedly, the snowflakes whipped and clung to my face and camera like myriad tiny hands. Now and then, the sounds of the crunching footsteps made me aware of strangers passing by furtively. The park was shrouded in the mystery of this luminous night. The high ascending buildings that frame the park were lost in the far-reaching darkness. But the bright glow to the south was unmistakable. There stands the Plaza. A tiny bell tinkled… a “Santa Claus” still at his post somewhere waiting for alms. The world about me, so aloof in the snowy stillness, held a serenity that filled me with gladness… an unknown something that for me is the spirit of Christmas… so glorious, so white, on this night of nights.
Composition:
We are led into the picture field over a winding black brook, resembling one of the many strange designs of the Chinese Dragon, culminating in a mysterious glow beyond the trees. The fantastic towers in the dim distance group themselves in pyramidal fashion and lend dignity to the drama.
Technical Problems:
The buildings were not visible, but their position was known through my daytime familiarity with the setting. The feeling of snow in the air was lost, due to time exposure and had to be reintroduced by printing a texture into the image during enlarging. The icy snow settled between metal parts of the camera and on the lens which made the camera useless after one exposure.
Data:
Camera: 4x6 inches
Lens: Zeiss Tessar 7 ¼ inches
Stop: f:11
Exposure: 3 ½ minutes
Plate: Illingworth Lightning
Exhibition Print: 12x17 inches, direct enlarging
Paper: Tuma Gas, blue toned"
by Adolf Fassbender, 1937
Location
Currently not on view
date made
before 1937
maker
Fassbender, Adolf
ID Number
PG.004116.01
accession number
146001
catalog number
4116.01
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1884-1886
maker
Muybridge, Eadweard
ID Number
PG.003856.0528
accession number
98473
catalog number
3856.0528
maker number
575

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