Michał Chomiński and Jan Królikowski as Photographed by Konrad Brandel Cover Image

Michał Chomiński i Jan Królikowski w obiektywie Konrada Brandla
Michał Chomiński and Jan Królikowski as Photographed by Konrad Brandel

A Look at Polish Theatre Photography in the 2nd Half of the 19th Century

Author(s): Marta Ziętkiewicz
Subject(s): Theatre, Dance, Performing Arts
Published by: Instytut Sztuki Polskiej Akademii Nauk
Keywords: Konrad Brandel;photography;Polish actors;19th-century photography

Summary/Abstract: At the beginning of 1866, the Warsaw-based photographic studio of Konrad Brandel took a series of photographs of two well-known dramatic artists, Michał Chomiński and Jan Królikowski. The actors were captured dressed in their stage costumes and re-enacting before the camera snippets of selected parts from their rich repertories. Circulating both as photographic prints and as reproductions published in the Kłosy illustrated weekly, they are among the most widely recognised portraits of 19th-century Polish actors to this day. The photographs under discussion are quite familiar to historians of theatre, and they have served as illustrating material for its history numerous times. The author, however, proposes that we stop treating them only as images documenting some staged situation and undertakes to examine the circumstances in which they were made and reconstruct the message that the actors and the photographer intended to convey to the public. For Chomiński, Królikowski and Konrad Brandel, were a means serving to boost their professional and social status and to project a certain image. The portraits took on additional meanings, often different than what their authors had intended, when they started being published by the press, found their way to private photo albums, and later, when they became part of museum or archival collections. Interdisciplinary study into the history of photography and theatre encounters provides a chance to get a better understanding of the cultural forces behind the mass production of portraits of actors in their parts. Consequently, the photographs become a document that can tell us a lot not only about the history of photography and theatre, but also about the history of the social order in which they functioned.

  • Issue Year: 257/2016
  • Issue No: 1-2
  • Page Range: 139-172
  • Page Count: 34
  • Language: Polish