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Unidentified photographer (America, 19th century) 
Two Men Staging a Fight in a Studio 
1860 (ca) 
  
Tintype, 1/6 plate 
Cleveland Museum of Art 
Gift of Charles Isaacs and Carol Nigro, 2003.303 
  
 
LL/87409 
  
Description (Accessed: 7 February 2019)
Although portrait sittings were directed by the photographer, sitters had some input in shaping their identities by choosing their pose, clothing, possessions, and sometimes backdrop. People came to the studio dressed in their finest outfits, and they often brought objects to represent their interests or occupation, such as the tuning fork held by the music teacher. Hand painting could draw attention to luxury items, as in Young Woman with Pantalettes, where her jewelry is dabbed with gold paint and the lacy cuffs of her pantalettes are enhanced with white paint. Most people had only a few photographs made during their lifetimes; therefore, they were often used to mark rites of passage such as graduation and marriage. 
 

 
  
 
  
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