Diableries stereocard: Une Exposition Infernale

PART OF:
The Kodak Museum Collection
Made:
circa 1866 in Paris
maker:
Unknown

Hand-coloured stereophotograph from the Diableries series, 'Une Exposition Infernale' [Infernal Exhibition], showing a bric a brac of objects, demons, skeletons and people in various costumes under a decorated horseshoe arch, 1860s.

Les Diableries is the title of a series of stereoscopic photographs published in Paris during the 1860s. They feature scenes of daily life in Hell sculpted from clay by Louis Alfred Habert, Pierre Adolph Hennetier, and Louis Edmond Cougny. The subject matter was often satirical and commented upon the corruption and excess of Paris during the Second Empire, ruled by Napoleon III. A total of 72 scenes were published by Block.

The photographs were reverse coloured by hand, then backed with a layer of tissue paper and sandwiched between two double window cardboard mattes. For added effect, the eyes of the skeletons and various other creatures were pierced and dabbed with coloured paint, causing their eyes to glow red. The final product was then viewed through a stereoscope which produced a 3D effect.

Details

Category:
Photographs
Collection:
Kodak Collection
Object Number:
1990-5036/13474
Materials:
paper (fibre product) and cardboard
Measurements:
overall: 87 mm x 177 mm x 2 mm,
type:
photograph and stereophotograph
credit:
The Kodak Collection at the National Science and Media Museum, Bradford