Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/08/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> > >Quite the contrary - While the photos by Mathew Brady's associates may >have adhered to a 'larger truth' about the horror of war in general and >the Civil War in particular, it is a long established fact that many >Brady photos were set up. > I think it safe to say that all Brady, et al, pictures with living beings in them were posed. The equipment of the day didn't allow for movement. However, the locations, soldiers and/or civilians and everything about them were genuine and thus truthful. There was no intent to deceive or misrepresent what the viewer was seeing. There was so much material available to photograph that fakery wasn't necessary or possibly even considered. As I recall from my 10 volume set "The Photographic History of the Civil War" (original 1911 edition), only one picture is thought to have been taken that actually shows evidence of a battle in progress. A man with binoculars is sitting on a hillside watching the smoke from the guns rise from a distance below. It's thought that it was taken at Antietam. IMO, the most "powerful" photograph of the war was of three Confederate prisoners taken at Gettysburg immediately following the battle and before they could be transported to POW camps. Thin and lean with the bearing of disciplined soldiers and the unmistakable attitude that "Yeah, you won the battle but we ain't licked yet!" Two more terrible years of war would prove them to be right. Pictures of the dead at Antietam, the Wilderness, Petersburg and other places are powerful too but the image of those three defiant men speaks volumes about that war. While the photographers of the time were as "honest" as possible, not so the journalists and artists who drew illustrations for the periodicals. They frequently took "artistic license" and it makes contemporary accounts reported in newspapers questionable in many cases. Interesting times, to be sure. Walker