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Anthony, Edwards & Co/T. Doney - Francis Fauvel-Gouraud, 1845

Maker: engraved by T. Doney from a daguerreotype by Edward Anthony (1819-1888) and Jonas M. Edwards (1813-1898)

Born: USA

Active: USA

Medium: engraving

Size: 3 11/16 in x 5 in

Location: USA

 

Object No. 2019.317b

Shelf: PHO-1845

 

Publication: Francis Fauvel-Gouraud, Phreno-Mnemotechny; or The Art of Memory: The Series of Lectures by Francis Fauvel-Gourand. New York & London: Wiley and Putnam, 1845, frontispiece

 

Other Collections:

 

Provenance: bookeddy

Rank: 168

 

Notes: François Fauvel Gouraud (1808- 1847) was a French expert in photography and mnemonics. He was most known as an expert on daguerreotypes, which in January 1839 had become the first publicly announced photographic process, invented in France by Louis Daguerre (1787–1851). Gouraud was an agent for the sole producer of daguerreotype cameras, Alphonse Giroux & Cie, when he in late 1839 sailed to America in order to introduce the invention and give lectures. In 1840 he spent time in Boston and sold the first camera to Samuel Bemis (1793–1881), one of the earliest photographers in USA. That camera is now in the collection of the George Eastman Museum in Rochester, NY. Gouraud also published an article entitled A Description of the Daguerreotype Process, or a Summary of M. Gouraud's Public Lectures, according to the principles of M. Daguerre; with a description of a provisory method for taking Human Portraits. He toured the northeast of USA, being in Buffalo in 1842, selling even to Samuel Morse (1791–1872) who had taken an interest since meeting Daguerre in Paris in 1839. Later in the 1840s he was a contributor to the development of the Mnemonic major system as it is known today, a way of remembering numbers. Gouraud was originally from Martinique. He died in Brooklyn only 39 years old in 1847. His wife had died a month before, and the two children were now orphans. His son colonel George Edward Gouraud (1842–1912) became a Medal of Honor recipient, and had a similar civil career, as he became Thomas Edison's agent in London and in 1888 brought the new Edison Phonograph cylinder audio recording technology to England. His daughter Clemence Emma Gouraud (1838–1913) was married in 1857 to the reverend and poet Horatio Nelson Powers (1826–1890). At the time of his death, he lived at 202 Columbia Street, Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. (source: Wikipedia)

 

Edward and Henry T. Anthony were brothers as well as photographic partners. Edward, born in 1818, was a civil engineer until the daguerreotype debuted in the United States. Immediately stricken with "daguerreotypemania," he took lessons in the fledgling medium from Samuel Morse and in 1841 joined a survey expedition of the U.S.-Canadian border as a photographer. He partnered with Jonas M. Edwards in Washington, D.C., for his first professional studio venture, specializing in portraits of congressmen and other Washington notables. In 1847 Edward began to collaborate with his older brother Henry, photographing and publishing cartes-de-visite and stereographic views. Together they founded the firm of E. and H.T. Anthony in New York in 1852, which was unquestionably the period's leading manufacturer and marketer of photographic supplies and equipment. The Anthonys provided financial support to Mathew Brady to photograph the Civil War and in return Brady gave them all of his duplicate negatives, which they published under his name in 1865. Following Henry's death in 1884, Edward continued to work; upon Edward's death four years later, the firm was willed to a nephew. It eventually became Agfa, one of the best known photographic companies today. (source: The Getty Museum)

 

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Uploaded on July 2, 2019
Taken on July 8, 2019