Curio

State Library of New South Wales

Dr Leichhardt - Saturday morning, c. 1844

MIN 98
Silhouette on paper

On 23 October this year Australia and Germany celebrated the bicentenary of explorer Ludwig Leichhardt’s birth. The eccentric and enigmatic Ludwig Leichhardt became a legend in Australian history for his voyages of exploration and spectacular disappearance without trace while crossing the Top End in 1848.

A form of paper art was the making of portrait silhouettes. The person to be captured in the art form was seated behind white paper. A candle was lit and placed behind the sitter who's profile was then cast onto the white paper. A machine was used which marked and reduced the shadow. The reduced silhouettes was cut from black paper, mounted and framed.


Silhouettes were a cheap form of portraiture that became especially popular once Lavater’s publications were known, being used to analyse racial and personal characteristics supposedly perceivable in the shape of the head. Aboriginal profiles by Fernyhough and his imitators would have provided English buyers, in particular, with another racial type to which they could apply current phrenological and physiognomical theories.

Richard Neville on William Henry Fernyhough, Design & Art Australia Online, 2011


‘Esq’ – short for Esquire – denoted that Dumaresq considered himself a gentleman or a person of rank.


A French bureaucrat by the name of Etienne de Silhouette created this form of portraiture in Paris, France in the mid- 1700's. Etienne was the French Minister of Finance, and was just as well-known for cutting "shades" of people as he was for cutting the budget to the bone.

http://www.silhouette-man.com/History.html