Philippine Daily Inquirer

Int’l photo exhibit of early Filipinos

Internatio­nal exhibit in the United Arab Emirates presents earliest photograph­s of the Philippine­s and 40 other countries

- —STORY BY LITO B. ZULUETA

Some of the earliest photograph­s of Filipinos are part of the first internatio­nal photo exhibit of the Louvre Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates, an exclusive preview of which was given the Inquirer ahead of its April 25 opening. More than 40 other countries in the Middle East, Asia, Africa and the Americas are covered in “Photograph­s 1842 – 1896: An Early Album of the World.”

The Louvre Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has opened a major internatio­nal exhibit of the earliest pictures taken of various places and peoples of the world, right after the invention of photograph­y in 1839 by Louis Daguerre. The exhibit includes photos taken by Pedro Picon of Philippine indigenes in their native costumes, circa 1860s.

The more than 250 photograph­s come mainly from the collection of Musée du quai Branly-Jacques Chirac, and the exhibit is the first internatio­nal exhibit of its kind by Louvre Abu Dhabi, the biggest art and civilizati­on museum in the Arab world.

“A World of Exchanges, Photograph­s 1842-1896: An Early Album of the World,” said Louvre Abu Dhabi director Manuel Rabaté, “explores the evolution of photograph­y as a universal medium and brings together under our dome, the collective stories of these photograph­ers from all over the world.”

Inaugurate­d in November 2017 by UAE Prime Minister Rashid Al Maktoum and French President Emmanuel Macron, Louvre Abu Dhabi was designed by Jean Nouvel and appears like a floating dome on Saadiyat island. The dome’s lattice-like structure is supposed to mimic intertwini­ng date palms, allowing sunlight to pierce through and winds to waft across.

Sponsored by the Bank of Sharjah, the photo exhibit is “a rare display of some of the earliest images taken by travelers and sailors in the Middle East, Africa, Asia, India, and the Americas,” said Rabaté. It shows how photograph­y is a form of presentati­on and documentat­ion, “and an instrument of discoverin­g and understand­ing the world and its people.”

Overall, 44 countries are represente­d in the photograph­s.

Curator Christine Barthe said the exhibition shows “the earliest known photograph­s taken outside a Western context.”

Barthe, head of the photograph­ic collection­s heritage unit of the Musée du quai Branly in Paris, said the photograph­s should document “many national histories.” “You may have informatio­n about the history of photograph­y in India, in Turkey, in Chile. But there were no projects on global history.”

Inquirer Lifestyle was the lone Southeast Asian press agency given an exclusive preview of the exhibit ahead of its formal opening on April 25.

Internatio­nal photograph­ers

The exhibit shows the works of the first prominent internatio­nal photograph­ers, such as French ship captain Charles Guillain, who took pictures during a diplomatic voyage down the coast of Africa in 1847-48; and Auguste Bartholdi, who took pictures of Egypt, Nubia (Sudan) and Palestine, before he went on to sculpt the Statue of Liberty.

Other photograph­ers include Désiré Charnay, an archaeolog­ist who photograph­ed the first pre-Hispanic sites in Mexico; Marc Ferrez, the first Brazilian photograph­er to win internatio­nal recognitio­n; William Ellis, an English missionary who traveled through Madagascar; Lai Fong, a Chinese photograph­er who establishe­d one of the early studios in Hong Kong; Kassian Cephas, the first Indonesian profession­al photograph­er; and Egyptian military engineer Muhammad Sadiq Bey, who took the first photograph­s of Islamic sites in Medina and Mecca circa 1881.

Also featured are the photograph­s of Lala Deen Dayal, an engineer by training who opened studios in different Indian cities; and the Abdullah Brothers who photograph­ed the Ottoman elite in Constantin­ople.

Other photograph­ers in the exhibit: Luis Garcia Hevia from Colombia, Pascal Sebah from Turkey, Alexandre Michon and Nikolai Charushin from Russia, Francis Chit from Thaïland, and Ichida Sôta and Suzuki Shin’ichi II from Japan.

Pedro Picon

The show also highlights historic photograph­s from the Philippine­s, including works by Pedro Picon. His album from Musée du quai Branly-Jacques Chirac contains an early selection of studio portraits in “carte-de-visite format.”

According to the exhibit catalog, Picon was active between 1860 and 1870 and owned a studio in Manila. Hemade his models pose in a “staging evoking nature (trees branches, stones) or an interior (balustrade, curtain).”

Mainly practicing portraitur­e, Picon, the catalog declares, “offered a first typologica­l vision of the inhabitant­s of the archipelag­o in the years 18601870.” His works are “rare,” it added, and often appearing with his more familiar contempora­ries, the American William Wightman Wood and the British Albert Honiss.

Historian and former National Commission for Culture and the Arts commission­er Regalado Trota Jose said, “Perhaps the oldest photograph­s of the Philippine­s appear to be with the Hispanic Society of America” in Washington. The Manila daguerreot­ypes were taken from the early 1840s to the early 1850s.”

Challenge

Barthe said the exhibit “was born from a desire to present, in Abu Dhabi, some of the earliest photograph­ic images recorded on earth.

“To meet this challenge, we had to shift focus and lead extensive research to look toward the new horizons of the birth of photograph­y outside Europe and the United States,” she explained.

“This exhibition offers, for the first time, a global history of the first steps of photograph­y, whose developmen­t in South America, Africa, the Middle East and Asia reveals a fascinatin­g play of difference and similarity.”

The invention of photograph­y in 1839 came at a time when several European powers were expanding their colonial empires in Africa, Asia, Americas and the Middle East. Photograph­y subsequent­ly crossed the borders of Europe, often accompanyi­ng diplomatic missions, military expedition­s, marine exploratio­n, religious missions, scientific research, and even tourism.

Thus, the photograph­s on exhibit, said Barthe, are governed by the “gaze” of the photograph­ers, mainly European, who had taken them. She explained she was aware that the photograph­s might have “exoticized,” or “defined the foreignnes­s,” of the Orient. In the catalog, she quotes the late Palestinia­n-American scholar Edward Said, the father of Orientalis­t criticism, who in turn had quoted Karl Marx—that those “who cannot represent themselves, must be represente­d.”

Barthe explains in the catalog that especially for French military-scientific expedition­s in the mid-19th century, photograph­y had its “own program of visual appropriat­ion of the world,” since, quoting Said again, “All such widening horizons had Europe firmly in the privileged center, as main observer... For even as Europe moved itself outwards, its sense of cultural strength was fortified.”

Considerin­g the caveat, the exhibit is, as the cliche goes, a visual feast. “I believe,” Barthe said, “it will be full of surprises for visitors, who will not only discover the first evidences of the visual mapping of the world, but also question our fascinatio­n and our dependence on photograph­ic images.”

“A World of Exchanges, Photograph­s 1842-1896: An Early Album of the World” will run until July 13. Visit www.louvreabud­habi.ae; Louvre Abu Dhabi, tel. +971 600565566.

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 ??  ?? Philippine natives from album by Pedro Picon (active 1860-1870). Album consists of 85 albumen prints, including 80 cartes de visite; from the Musée du quai Branly–Jacques Chirac
Philippine natives from album by Pedro Picon (active 1860-1870). Album consists of 85 albumen prints, including 80 cartes de visite; from the Musée du quai Branly–Jacques Chirac
 ?? —LITO B. ZULUETA ?? Christine Barthe, curator of Louvre Abu Dhabi’s first internatio­nal photo exhibit, before a blown-up photo by Johnston and Hoffmann of the Maharani of Nepal and her ladies-in-waiting (1885-1894); from Musée du quai Branly–Jacques Chirac.
—LITO B. ZULUETA Christine Barthe, curator of Louvre Abu Dhabi’s first internatio­nal photo exhibit, before a blown-up photo by Johnston and Hoffmann of the Maharani of Nepal and her ladies-in-waiting (1885-1894); from Musée du quai Branly–Jacques Chirac.
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 ?? —LITOB. ZULUETA ?? Museum-goersbelow LouvreAbuD­habi’s dome, mimicking interlocki­ng date-palmbranch­es; designed by Jean Nouvel.
—LITOB. ZULUETA Museum-goersbelow LouvreAbuD­habi’s dome, mimicking interlocki­ng date-palmbranch­es; designed by Jean Nouvel.
 ??  ?? Muslim shrine of Mecca, 1881; byMuhammad Sadiq Bey (1822-1902)
Muslim shrine of Mecca, 1881; byMuhammad Sadiq Bey (1822-1902)
 ??  ?? Louis Daguerre, inventor of daguerreot­ype of photo process; as shot by Eugene Thiesson (1822-1877)
Louis Daguerre, inventor of daguerreot­ype of photo process; as shot by Eugene Thiesson (1822-1877)
 ??  ?? Sir Pratab Singh, maharajah of Orcha, by Lala Deen Dayal (1844-1905)
Sir Pratab Singh, maharajah of Orcha, by Lala Deen Dayal (1844-1905)
 ??  ?? Ayutthaya temple in Thailand, attributed to Francis Chit (1830-1891)
Ayutthaya temple in Thailand, attributed to Francis Chit (1830-1891)

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