Further into Imperfecta

Performers and Photography

In the 1860s, photography was a new technology. Traveling circuses adopted it to create and sell pictures of performers, often staged in professional studios. Freak show performers often dressed up either in very fancy dress or in costume, and they posed with props that often accentuated their abnormality. Photographs were then printed as postcards and sold at circuses and museums. Visitors could either collect the postcards or send them to people who were not able to see the circus themselves. Some performers, like Chang and Eng Bunker, had a great deal of say in how these photographs were posed and how they were presented within them. This was not true for all performers, but many did find photography to be a meaningful way to take control of how their bodies were presented and seen by others.

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  1. Tocci Brothers
  2. Violetta