Magic Lantern Slide- Family and House
- Description
-
Who are the people in this magic lantern slide? Where is this house? Why is there so much mud? And, most importantly, had anyone heard of firearms safety? The child in the picture must be hoping that the gun isn't loaded.
If anyone can answer these questions (or can decipher the writing on this slide) please let the MAVtech Museum know! In the absence of any answers we can see why this slide is important: many family photographs and postcards show groups outside of houses. With land needing to be broken in, families outside their properties were seen as a kind of colonial pride.
What they are holding also speaks volumes about how people saw themselves (or at least, how they wanted to be seen). The man is holding a gun and is seen as a powerful provider. The boy holds a hammer- has he been helping with the work? The lady holds a book (a Bible perhaps? This was common for womens' photographs in Western countries back then). And the young lady looks ready to go to school or church in her neat hat and tidy clothing. These themes were often used in professional photographs and subconsciously spilled over into many early snapshots.
Mind you- this could also be a professional photograph.
Also, this is a lantern slide, designed to be projected onto a wall. Unlike a personal photo album, these slides were usually viewed as a large group. Extended family? A soldier overseas in the First World War? (the Dunedin Photographic Society took photographs of families that soldier relatives could then view near the front. These were all magic lantern slides.)
Photographs are often seen as perfect windows into the past but this one holds more questions than answers!
Identification
- Object type
- Image
- Date
- 1910s
Creation
- Created By
- MAVtech Museum
- Place
- MAVtech Museum
Object rights
- License
- Attribution + Noncommercial + ShareAlike