Description
Description
These striking studio portraits, curated and brought together following ten years of research championed by Autograph, constitute the most comprehensive collection of nineteenth-century photography depicting the Black subject in the Victorian era, including some of the earliest known images of Black people photographed in Britain.
The historically marginalized lives of both ordinary and prominent Black figures of African, Afro-Caribbean, South Asian, and mixed heritage are seen through a prism of curatorial advocacy and experimental scholarly assemblage. Black Chronicles features high quality reproductions of plate negatives, cartes de visite, and cabinet cards, many of which were buried deep in various private and public archives including the Hulton Archive's remarkable London Stereoscopic Company collection, unseen for decades. These photographs are linked with imperial and colonial narratives through newly commissioned essays and rare lecture transcripts, in-conversation and text interventions by Caroline Bressey, Henry Louis Gates Jr., Paul Gilroy, Stuart Hall, M. Neelika Jayawardane, Lola Jaye, Renée Mussai and Val Wilmer, and an afterword by Mark Sealy.
Built upon groundbreaking, in-depth new research, Black Chronicles opens up photographic archives to expand and enrich photography's complex cultural histories and subjectivities, offering an essential insight into the visual politics of race, representation and difference in the Victorian era by addressing this crucial missing chapter.
Introduction and texts by Renée Mussai, foreword by Henry Louis Gates Jr., text by Paul Gilroy, text by Stuart Hall, text by Caroline Bressey, text by Lola Jaye, text by M. Neelika Jayawardane, afterword by Mark Sealy, text by Val Wilmer.
Published by Thames & Hudson in partnership with Autograph.
Critical Reviews
Critical Reviews
Those portrayed appear to almost jump out from its pages... There is much to learn from the various contributions, especially since they give a reader crucial insight into how the exhibition the book is based on was made and how contemporary curators and thinkers approach the photographs of these colonial subjects (some of them snatched from their home countries in the most gruesome fashion) in today's Britain (a country in which, like in most other Western countries, the far right is openly racist)... A photographic portrait very much does [this]: of the person portrayed, it says 'I am a man', 'I am a woman', 'I am a person' -- 'I am a human being'. Even as this might not have been the intention of those who commissioned and/or made the photographs in Black Chronicles, this is the searing, important message behind the photographs.
-- "Conscientious Photography" (6/9/2025 12:00:00 AM) A deeply researched volume containing the most extensive gathering of images of Black people in 19th Century England [and] a noble enterprise... Black Chronicles is not a typical photobook: it is an invitation to explore and to reengage this history. In these pages we may never know the names and the stories behind these portraits--many of which are striking--but in spending time with these images we can help retrieve the past, and perhaps remember what has shaped us.-- "Art Photo Collector" (6/1/2025 12:00:00 AM)
Publishing Information
Publishing Information

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