Portrait of a man with side-whiskers, in a tailcoat, seated, resting his left arm on a wooden table. In tha background visible painted decoration comprised by a column on the left and a vine on the right.

Similar

Portrait of a man with side-whiskers, in a tailcoat, seated, resting his left arm on a wooden table. In tha background visible painted decoration comprised by a column on the left and a vine on the right.

description

Summary

Portrait of a man with side-whiskers, in a tailcoat, seated, resting his left arm on a wooden table. In tha background visible painted decoration comprised by a column on the left and a vine on the right.

The daguerreotype is a photographic process invented by the Parisian inventor and entrepreneur Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre (1787-1851) who was the first person to publicly announce a successful method of capturing images. His invention was an immediate hit, and France was soon gripped by ‘daguerreotypomania’. Daguerre released his formula and anyone was free to use it without paying a license fee – except in Britain, where he had secured a patent. Daguerreotypes required a subject to remain still for several minutes to ensure that the image would not blur.

A collection of portraits from National Technical Museum, Prague, Czech Republic. National Technical Museum in Prague, established in 1908, assembled documents of the development of many technical fields, natural and exact sciences, and of industry on the territory of today’s Czech Republic.

date_range

Date

1840 - 1850
place

Location

europe
create

Source

Narodni Technicke Muzeum
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain Marked

Explore more

portrait
portrait