Showing posts with label The Merchants House Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Merchants House Museum. Show all posts

7/18/11

Civil War Exhibit Extended Until August 29


NEW YORK'S CIVIL WAR SOLDIERS
Photographs of Dr. R. B. Bontecou, Words of Walt Whitman. 
EXTENDED THROUGH AUGUST 29, 2011
Merchant's House Museum, 29 East Fourth Street, NY, NY

From Broadway World.com
Thanks to an overwhelming response from visitors, the Merchant's House Museum, in partnership with The Burns Archive, will extend the exhibition of photographs of wounded New York soldiers by army surgeon and native New Yorker Dr. Reed B. Bontecou that opened in April to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the start of the Civil War. More-than 100 images of human ruination are captioned with quotations from Walt Whitman's 1882 memoir, Specimen Days, in which he recounts his own horrifying experience as a volunteer nurse. According to Whitman, "The real war will never get in the books."
William Stewart, 3 NY Independent Battery.
 Aged 20 years, wounded at Petersburg, March 25, 1865.
Gun shot wound of humerus, resection of head of right humerus
A View of One of the Displays of Bontecou's Photographs
on Exhibit at the Merchant's House Museum.

4/18/11

WNYC NEWS: THE BURNS ARCHIVE CIVIL WAR EXHIBITION


Merchant's House to Display Photos of New York Civil War Regiment Soldiers





Wednesday, April 13, 2011



On April 13, 1861, the U.S. Army garrison at Fort Sumter, South Carolina surrendered to Confederate troops. Two days later, President Abraham Lincoln issued a proclamation calling for 75,000 militiamen to pick up their rifles and squelch the southern rebellion. The American Civil War was on.  
In honor of the soldiers who put their lives on the line in the ensuing four years of war, the Merchant's House Museum in Manhattan is presenting a series of photographs of wounded Civil War soldiers who served in New York regiments. The exhibit marks the first time any of the photographs will be displayed to the public in the 150 years since the war.  
Military historian and Civil War reenactor Robert Mulligan, who is from Albany, said the New York battalions included some notable troops.  
"One was in the box with Lincoln when Lincoln was shot, and another was the first union officer killed in the war, Elmer Ellsworth," he said.  
Each photograph at the Merchant's House Museum exhibit was taken by Reed Brockway Bontecou, who was the surgeon in charge of Washington, D.C.'s Harewood U.S. Army General Hospital. When the war ended, the photographs became the largest part of the government’s war medical photograph collection.  
Mulligan has for years played the roles of Corporal James Tamer of the 86th New York Infantry and Sargent Rice C. Bull of the 103rd New York Infantry. Bull was injured in battle and Tamer lost both of his feet, but Mulligan doubted that either of the men passed through Bontecou's hospital.  
"It was a hub of medical treatment, but I'd be surprised to find their photographs," he said. "There were just too many injured soldiers."  
In 1975, a New York City ophthalmologist who had taken an interest to collecting historical photographs, Stanley B. Burns, acquired the photographs from the Bontecou family. He soon established the distinguished Burns Collection, which has since become the nation’s largest private comprehensive collection of early medical photography.  
Dr. Burns has published two (of three) volumes of the Bontecou photographs. The most recent one, "Shooting Soldiers: The Civil War Medical Photography of Reed Bontecou," will be released on Thursday to coincide with the opening of the Merchant's House exhibition.   
At the exhibit, more then 100 graphic photographs of human disfigurement will be accompanied by passages from Walt Whitman's "Specimen Days,"  a memoir of his horrific experiences as a volunteer nurse. Along with other images and memorabilia of the time, the words tell the real story of the Civil War that Whitman said would "never get into the books."


To see the article on the WNYC website and view the slide show click HERE 

11/16/10

TOMORROW NIGHT! Book Release Reception and Lecture for Sleeping Beauty III





Wednesday, November 17, 7 p.m.


Reading: Sleeping Beauty III Memorial Photography: The Children 
Dr. Stanley Burns of The Burns Archive will speak about the practice of postmortem photography from the 19th century until today, and sign copies of his latest book in the renowned Sleeping Beauty series. A reception to meet the author will follow. 
Free, space is limited.


Merchant's House Museum
29 East Fourth Street, New York, NY 10003
The Museum is located between Lafayette Street and Bowery


To RSVP Call 212-777-1089


To read more about postmortem photography at The Burns Archive click here:
http://theburnsarchive.blogspot.com/2010/06/postmortem-photography-at-burns-archive.html

11/2/10

ABC News Coverage of Memento Mori Exhibition



ABC NEWS ONLINE

By KAREN RUSSO
Nov. 1, 2010

Photographs of parents posing next to their dead children and the sound of dripping water simulating ice melting over a decomposing body are both disturbing and heart-breaking components of a new exhibition at the Merchant House Museum.

"Memento Mori" includes more than 50 postmortem memorial photographs and ephemera from the Burns Archive which is considered to be the largest private archive of historic photography. The exhibition also includes modern takes on memorial photography.

Postmortem photographs became popular after the introduction of photography in the mid-19th century. Although it seems morbid, photographs of the dead were done out a desire to preserve an image of a loved one.

"These portraits were not for public consumption," said Dr. Stanley B. Burns, 72, the archives' owner. "They were held very close to the chest."

In many cases, especially with children, family members often died before relatives had an opportunity to take their portraits.

 It's macabre but it doesn't creep me out," said Vincent Warren, 72, a library curator from Montreal, Canada. Warren happened upon the exhibition while touring the Merchant House Museum, a historic Federal style row house in Manhattan's East Village built in 1832.

Warren said the exhibition makes him think about the tremendous grief parents must have experienced when they lost their children.

"It wasn't easy," he noted. "It's sad, that's what it is. We're all going to turn to dust."

The Merchant House Museum was home to a single family for more than 100 years and still includes the house's original furniture and decorations. However, one thing is missing: postmortem photography. In particular, there were no postmortem photographs of Seabury Tredwell, the patriarch of the family. As a result, photographer Hal Hirshorn. 45, created his own vision of the Tredwell wake scene.

Hirshorn uses an old-fashioned salt-and-gelatin developing technique in his modern-day work. For him, it was a rare opportunity to use his 19th century style in the museum's 19th century environment. Hirshorn's seven photographs taken in the Merchant House Museum show the possible wake scene, including female models posing as Tredwell's mourning widow and daughter.

"Death really happened at home," said Eva Ulz, the museum's education and communications manager. She compared it to today when wakes and memorial services are held in funeral parlors outside the private home.

The idea that a family lived and mourned their dead relatives was part of the inspiration for artist Sarah Lohman's exhibition component.

Lohman's idea for the disturbing and distracting sound of dripping water in one of the Merchant bedrooms comes from a passage by Dr. Burns in his postmortem photography book Sleeping Beauty II: "When a body was laid out over ice in her family's parlor, the sound of melting ice dripping into pans kept her awake. To this very day, dripping sounds brings back to her the memories of dead bodies and sleepless nights."

"The idea that something as everyday as a dripping faucet could conjure up such a powerful image of death intrigued me," Lohman explained. "Life is a multi-sensory experience; I believe that invoking these senses to connect with people of the past is a very powerful teaching tool."

9/23/10

Memento Mori- The Exhibition & Opening at The Merchant's House Museum

Below are a few photographs illustrating the exhibition at The Merchant's House Museum. According to historic preservation rules the installation had to be creatively planned. No photos could be hung on the walls or placed directly on the furniture of this beautifully preserved 19th century home, nor could there be bright lights or flash photography. Memento Mori curator Eva Ulz did a great job of displaying a rich amount of information to compliment the historical and contemporary images. Early daguerreotypes and ambrotypes are exhibited in closets, waiting to be discovered. Three traditional wood displays encase memorial ephemera including postmortem photographs, coffin plates and cards. There is a sound and scent component to the exhibition as well- the rooms are perfumed and subtle recordings can be heard.
The Opening Sign
A View of the Rear Parlor
A View of the Front Parlor
Reproduction Casket by Artist Marian St. Laurent
On Display in Eliza Tredwell's Bedroom on the Second Story of the House
One of the Informational Timelines Created by the Museum
The Postmortem Photo on the Left is a Print from
Sleeping Beauty II
Postmortem Daguerreotypes & Ambrotypes
Displayed on the 'Whatnot' Shelf
One of the Three Cases Displaying Postmortem Paper Prints
Another One of the Postmortem Display Cases
Dr. Burns With His Video Camera Before the Opening Reception
Eva Ulz: Giving the Coffin a Test Run
Visitors to the exhibition can try out the coffin and
have their own postmortem photograph recorded.
Lissa Rivera of The Burns Archive
Reading the Display by Marian St. Laurent
Alice Lease Dana of The Burns Archive
Modeling her Mantilla in the 'Secret' Garden

A Slideshow of Photos From the Opening Reception


Dr. Burns 'At Rest' After a Hard Day's Work
A Souvenir From the Opening Reception
Visitors to the opening had their own postmortem taken as a souvenir to the event. Anyone who visits is encouraged to try out the coffin and have their own photo captured. The museum has started a Flickr gallery to collect and share the images. Click HERE to see who has been brave enough to step inside! 

Even if you did not make it to the opening you can still see the exhibit through November 29. There will be events such as a book signing & lecture with Dr.Burns as well as a 1865 Funeral Reenactment held by the museum staff. Please keep an eye on this blog and the Merchant's House Museum Calendar HERE.

9/10/10

New Sleeping Beauty III Website, New York Times Style Article & More!

© 2010 The Burns Archive, Sleeping Beauty III Memorial Photography: The Children


WWW.SLEEPINGBEAUTY3.COM


The Burns Archive was happy. They announced the launch of a website for the release of the Burns Press publication Sleeping Beauty III Memorial Photography: The Children. It is a sneak peak into the contents of the book and features an image gallery with preview photographs from the book. 
The New York Times Style Blog posted about our exhibition at The Merchant’s House Museum. Please click here to read more.
Joanna Ebenstein of Morbid Anatomy posted information about the exhibition. Check out her blog to learn more about her lecture series at The Observatory and Library which features books on Art, Science, Medicine & Death.

9/7/10

Memento Mori- Creating the Exhibition

“Memento Mori:” The Birth & Resurrection of Postmortem Photography

The Merchant's House Museum
 29 East 4th Street, NY, NY



Thursday, September 9, 2010 through Monday, November 29, 2010

Outside the Merchant's House Museum
Plaque- About MHM
Drinking secret recipe MHM tea, note the 19th cent. folding chairs.
Eva Ulz, Dr. Burns, Pi Gardiner, Lissa Rivera, Sarah Simms
Dr.Burns laying out his collection of antique coffin plates, death announcements, mourning pins, postmortem photographs and other funerary ephemera. 
An appropriate Victorian Setting for memorial images.
Alice Lease Dana (Left) Dr.Burns (Right)
"At Rest"
Trying out the coffin that will be on display for visitors
to have their own postmortem photo taken.
© The Merchant's House Museum, photo by Jook Leung
A view of the rear parlor at the Merchant's House
© The Merchant's House Museum, photo by Jook Leung
A view of Eliza Tredwell's Bedroom at the Merchant's House


"In collaboration with the Burns Archive; featuring artists Joel-Peter Witkin, Sally Mann, Hal Hirshorn, Marian St. Laurent & Sarah Lohman. Trace the evolution of postmortem photography in America through 19th-century daguerreotypes and prints from Sleeping Beauty III (soon to be released by the Burns Archive) as well as modern art inspired by the iconography of these historic images. Then stage your own “postmortem” photograph in our reproduction coffin. Included with regular admission. Reservations not required."