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  1. 19 maj 2012 · Many postmortem photographs were close-ups of the face or shots of the full body. The deceased were usually depicted to appear as if they were in a deep sleep, or else arranged to appear more life-like.

  2. Post-mortem photograph of the Norwegian theologian Bernhard Pauss with flowers, photographed by Gustav Borgen, Christiania, November 1907. Post-mortem photography is the practice of photographing the recently deceased. Various cultures use and have used this practice, though the best-studied area of post-mortem photography is that of Europe and ...

  3. 3 cze 2021 · To look at America during the Roaring Twenties, Stacker compiled a list of discoveries, trends, and changes that shaped lives in the 1920s, from news sites, historic research, scientific studies...

  4. 19 lip 2017 · Postmortem daguerreotypes are piercingly intimate. They bring the viewer close enough to the face of the dead to see a boy’s long lashes, or a girl’s spray of freckles. Many were taken at home.

  5. www.nyhistory.org › blogs › postmortem-photography-at-the-turn-of-the-20th-centuryNew-York Historical Society

    Creating images of the deceased might seem like an eerie or disturbing taboo to contemporary culture, but postmortem photographs are artifacts that document an unspoken part of our social history, and can be seen as icons or reminders of love and loss.

  6. www.notesfromthefrontier.com › post › death-photographyDeath Photography - Frontier

    5 gru 2019 · In fact, death photographs were called “mirrors with memories” and were often the only images remaining of passed loved ones. Today, post-mortem photography may seem macabre to us. But, to the Victorians, it was a way to cope with ubiquitous death and memorialize lost loved ones.

  7. 26 paź 2017 · Three of the photographs show the anonymous body, one with his hat perched on his head, and three are of objects in his possession: a pair of boots and a pocket watch.

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