Autumn 2020 Catalogue
17 American Heroes & Leaders Autumn 2020 “In Lincoln’s Face… American Character”: A Great Rarity— Vintage Carte-De-Visite Of Lincoln, Signed By Him As President, Taken On August 9, 1863, Within Weeks Of The Battle Of Gettysburg 14. (LINCOLN, Abraham) (GARDNER, Alexander). Carte-de-visite photograph signed by Lincoln (“A. Lincoln”) as President. Washington, August 9, 1863. Vintage albumen print, 2-3/4 by 3 inches, mounted on 2-1/2 by 3-1/2 inch stiff card stock. $110,000. Click for more info Exceedingly rare Alexander Gardner carte-de-visite portrait of Lincoln, boldly signed “A. Lincoln” below the image, one of only three signed examples of this image that we know of, showing him seated at a marble-topped table with his reading glasses in one hand and the partially folded pages of a newspaper in the other, this exceptionally rare portrait printed from Gardner’s glass collodion negative, taken at hisWashington studio on August 9, 1863. After the Battle of Gettysburg, Lincoln was “buoyed by the thought that ‘the rebel power is at last beginning to disintegrate” (Kearns Goodwin, 545). Lincoln spent many friendly hours with his private secretary John Hay, who was in many ways like a son to the President. “In his diary, Hay described a number of pleasant outings” that summer. Of particular note was one Sunday, on August 9, when “Hay accompanied the president to Gardner’s photo studio at the corner of Seventh and D Streets,” where Gardner took one of his very first photographs of Lincoln (Kearns Goodwin, 545) and six other images as well. Known for his iconic images of the Civil War, Gardner and his work are closely associated with that of Mathew Brady. On that day, in Gardner’s studio, Lincoln sat at a “marble-topped table, reading glasses in one hand, holding partially folded sheets of a Washington newspaper; it seems a certainty that Gardner has posed Lincoln—an avid reader of the news—in the act of reading the Sunday newspapers. The sitting which produced this and six other images was on Sunday, August 9, 1863 and Lincoln’s private secretary, John Hay, noted in his diary: ‘I went down with the President to have his picture taken at Gardner’s. He was in very good spirits'” (quoted by Katz, Witness to an Era , 112). Less than 140 known photographic views of Lincoln have survived, in the formof daguerreotypes, a few salt prints, tintypes, ambrotypes, stereographic cards and cartes-de-visite—the last, 2-1/2 by 3-1/2 albumen prints such as this rare portrait, each “printed on albumen paper from glass collodion negatives… Many of the photographs have been desecrated or destroyed… The fugitive nature of the photographic chemicals themselves has caused many of the original albumen prints to fade… Of the 103 surviving poses known, or believed, to have originated as glass collodion negatives made for printing, there are only 24 for which an original, or suspected original negative can still be found. The remaining 78 poses survive only as original prints or as copies of lost originals.” This carte-de-visite was created from the multiple-image stereographic glass collodion negative made by Alexander Gardner, in Washinton, DC, August 9, 1863. The original negative has been lost (Mellon, 9-14, 129). Contains Gardner’s Washington D.C. studio inkstamp on card verso; card backing with rounded lower corners, trimmed at the upper edge without affecting image. We know of only two other surviving signed examples of this image. Image crisp, signature bold and dark. A superb signed carte-de-visite, exceedingly rare and desirable.
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