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Four’s a Crowd: Intimate Photos of People Gathering For the Camera in the Early 20th Century

Photography undergoes extraordinary changes in the early part of the twentieth century. This can be said of every other type of visual representation, however, but unique to Photography is the transformed perception of the medium. That’s why photography appealed to artists by the early 1900s.


In the later nineteenth century, photography spread in its popularity, and inventions like the Kodak #1 Camera (1888) made it accessible to the upper-middle class consumer; the Kodak Brownie camera, which cost far less, reached the middle class by 1900.

By the early 1920s, technology becomes a vehicle of progress and change, and instills hope in many after the devastations of World War I. For avant-garde artists, photography becomes incredibly appealing for its associations with technology, the everyday, and science—precisely the reasons it was denigrated a half-century earlier. The camera’s technology of mechanical reproduction made it the fastest, most modern, and arguably, the most relevant form of visual representation in the post-WWI era.

Here below is a set of intimate vintage photos from Steve Given that shows people gathering for the camera in the early 20th century.






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This post first appeared on Trendinista, please read the originial post: here

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Four’s a Crowd: Intimate Photos of People Gathering For the Camera in the Early 20th Century

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