Daguerre (1787—1851) and the invention of photography

2014-01-08

Unknown Artist: Louis-Jacques-Mande Daguerre" (2005.100.611) In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History . New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000

On January 7, 1839, members of the French Académie des Sciences were shown products of an invention that would forever change the nature of visual representation: photography. The astonishingly precise pictures they saw were the work of Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre (1787–1851), a Romantic painter and printmaker most famous until then as the proprietor of the Diorama, a popular Parisian spectacle featuring theatrical painting and lighting effects. Each daguerreotype (as Daguerre dubbed his invention) was a one-of-a-kind image on a highly polished, silver-plated sheet of copper...

Read the full article on the Metropolitan Museum of Art website.