Feb 07, 2008 - Sale 2135

Sale 2135 - Lot 10

Unsold
Estimate: $ 18,000 - $ 22,000
BRADY, MATHEW (1823-1896)
Connecticut Regiment Drill. Arch-topped albumen print, 9 1/2x14 inches (24.1x35.6 cm.), on the original mount measuring 20x24 inches (50.8x61 cm.), with "Brady's Photographic Gallery" embossed stamp on mount recto. Circa 1862

Additional Details

From a private collection; to the present owner in 2004.


Matthew Brady opened a daguerreian photography studio on lower Broadway, in New York City, in 1844. He was quickly recognized as one of America's greatest portrait photographers. A decade later he expanded his business to start a studio in Washington, D.C., where he photographed American political and foreign dignitaries.


In 1861, at the peak of his success, Brady turned his attention to the Civil War. Working with a team of photographers (or "operators") he set out to document the war on a grand scale, even photographing troops in the field. This image, which recalls studies by Gustave LeGray of Chalons, in 1857, is a remarkably detailed large-format view of military maneuvers in the Union camp.

Although Brady did not actually shoot many of the Civil War photographs attributed to him, he dictated the scope of the coverage. He spent most of his time supervising his corps of traveling photographers, preserving their negatives and buying others from private photographers freshly returned from the battlefield, so that his collection would be as comprehensive as possible. When photographs from his collection were published, whether printed by Brady or adapted as engravings in publications, they were credited "Photograph by Brady," although they were actually the work of many people. Brady was one of the first photographers to understand photography as a visual language and employed the medium to chronicle national history.