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The Stevens-Cogdell/Sanders-Venning Collection contains several 19th- and 20th-century portrait photographs of members of the extended Black families descended from the relationship of Richard Codgell, South Carolina merchant and enslaver, and Sarah Sanders, an enslaved woman in his household. The portraits embody an anti-racist, counter archive to contemporaneous collections of racist imagery and caricatures.
Probably a Black family member or friend took this snapshot in the backyard of the residence of Miranda Cogdell Venning, granddaughter of Sarah Sanders. There is both a formalness and candidness to the sitters’ mannerisms in this image taken at the family home. Miranda, probably the woman seated on the hammock, was the first African American graduate of the Philadelphia Girls High School and Normal School. A school principal, she died of tuberculosis one year after this view was taken. She was thirty-eight years old.
M. C. V., June 1899, Venning's Yard, [1116 Fitzwater Street]. Cyanotype. Stevens-Cogdell/Sanders-Venning Collection.
The acquisition of 151 watercolor views of Philadelphia by Benjamin R. Evans was the first significant acquisition by the Graphic Arts Department.
Commissioned by antiquarian Ferdinand Dreer, Evans created many drawings on site and based others on photographs or earlier artwork. Evans’s views focused on small shops and modest buildings, like Enoch’s Variety Theatre, rather than city landmarks and portrayed a world far neater and homogeneous than the actual city.
Benjamin Ridgway Evans, East Side of Seventh Below Arch, 1883. Watercolor. Purchase 1975.
Although the identity of these sitters is unknown, much can be inferred about these individuals and their circumstances through visual clues.
The nicely painted background and tree trunk prop in the Snyder & Walton photograph suggest that the studio served an upper-middle class clientele. The woman’s immaculate clothing provides further proof of this.
The portrait of the man, however, is a collage of the sitter's image pasted onto an ornate background. This presentation suggests that the man could not afford to sit for a portrait at a more well-resourced studio.
The details of these different studio settings showcase the divergent socioeconomic statuses and experiences that African Americans had in the aftermath of slavery. The portraits also show that the desire to signal a refined appearance to counter racial stereotypes was one that crossed class boundaries.
Snyder & Walton, [Unidentified Young African American Woman], ca. 1893. Albumen on cabinet card mount.
[Unidentified African American Man], ca. 1875. Albumen mounted on cardboard.
In honor of National Cupcake Day we are sharing this recipe from the 1828 edition of Eliza Leslie's "Seventy-Five Receipts for Pastry, Cakes, and Sweetmeats." Leslie was a prolific author of popular cookbooks, and was the first to publish a recipe for the "cup cake."
One of the first American popular graphics art work purchased for the Print Department, this print purports to be an accurate depiction of George Washington’s final hours and was published shortly after his December 1799 death.
Martha Washington watches from the foot of the bed while two physicians attend to the former president. The artist, however, made the decision to not include any of the enslaved people in the Washington household whose presence at the deathbed was recorded in contemporary written descriptions and other later 19th-century visual depictions of the scene.
G. Washington in his Last Illness Attended by Doc[tor]s Craik and Brown (Philadelphia: [Edward Pember and James Luzarder], ca. 1800). Hand-colored etching.
"To give the mitten" used to be slang for rejecting a romantic partner. We hope all the mittens you might get this season are meant only to keep your fingers nice and toasty.