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Egyptian Lantern Slides - Places
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In 1849, the Philadelphia
daguerreotypists William and Frederick
Langenheim introduced the lantern slide:
a transparent image on glass that could
be projected, in magnified form, onto a
surface using a "magic
lantern," or sciopticon. This new
technology expanded the uses of
photography, allowing photographic
images to be viewed by a large audience.
With lantern slides, Museum curators and
educators could illustrate their
lectures, letting audience members see
detailed studies of objects and sites
from around the world.
The Brooklyn Museum's lantern slide
collection was started by the Museum's
curator of fine arts, William Henry
Goodyear, in the late nineteenth
century. With the assistance of the
photographers Joseph Hawkes and John
McKecknie, Goodyear reproduced images of
archaeological and architectural sites
in Europe as well as images of the Paris
Exposition, which Hawkes often
hand-colored for more realistic effect.
The lantern slide collection also
developed through the efforts of the
curator of ethnology, Stewart Culin, and
his successor Herbert Spinden, who
created and purchased images of objects
and sites. The Museum’s Library now holds 11,710 glass lantern slides. Read more about the history of the lantern slide
collection.
These images were uploaded at high
resolution and it helps us to know how
our visitors work with our images, so if
you use them, we'd love to know how!
Drop us a line by leaving a comment here
or email our archivist:
library@brooklynmuseum.org
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125 photos | 34,536 views
items are from 1900.