81:1760:0001
Unidentified Photographer
DESCRIPTIVE TITLE:
Door of the Sagrario Metropolitano (attached to the Mexico City
Cathedral)
ca. 1840
NOTES:
Catalogued 7/94, MMD.
Fernando Osorio Alarcon believes that these were the first
photographic images of Mexico and suggests that these were made by
Jean Prelier Dudoille, a French engraver living in Mexico City. It is
recorded that Prelier arrived in Vera Cruz on December 3, 1839. A
newspaper account dated Jan. 21, 1840 noted that Prelier had
recently made several daguerreotypes in the area of the Cathedral in
Mexico City as a public demonstration of the process.
Osorio speculates that Cromer may have acquired the plates from Baron
Louis Gros, who visited Mexico in 1852. They may have been purchased
from Prelier, or from descendants that returned with the plates to
France. Additionally he raises the possibility that Fanny Calderon de
la Barca (1804-1882), the Scottish wife of the first Spanish envoy to
independent Mexico, acquired the images as momentos of her travels in
Mexico (Dec. 18, 1839 to Jan 8, 1842), or may even have been the
daguerreotypist herself.
Osorio Alarcon, F. "Los Daguerrotipos Mexicanos..." in "Mexico en el
Tiempo, revista de Historua y Conservacion" Year 3, No. 22
(January/February 1998)
SUBJECTS:
daguerreotype
21.5 x 16.4 cm., full plate
Museum Collection
81:1760:0001
architecture, façade
study, relief
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