Lot of 32, including 11 with the back J.P. Ball's Photographic Gallery and 21 with Ball & Thomas backmarks (both in Cincinnati), including two of African American subjects. Several cartes ink identified on verso. J.P. Ball, a noted African American photographer, opened his first studio in Cincinnati, OH in 1845, then became an itinerant photographer, traveling to Pittsburgh, Richmond, and throughout Ohio. He eventually resettled in Cincinnati in 1849 and opened a Daguerreian Gallery downtown, which subsequently became one of the most well known galleries in the U.S. During the early 1850s, when Ball opened an additional gallery in Cincinnati, he hired his future brother-in-law, Alexander Thomas, to work with him, and by 1857, he became a full partner in the business. Ball and Thomas' gallery was soon known as "the finest photographic gallery west of the Allegheny Mountains." In March 1860, the partnership between J.P. Ball and Alexander Thomas dissolved, but J.P. Ball's younger brother, Thomas C. Ball, continued to work as a studio photographer with Alexander Thomas until his death in 1875. (Information obtained from the Cincinnati Historical Library: J.P. Ball Database, May 4, 2011.) Provenance: Dr. John W. Ravage Collection of African American Photography Condition: Most with only light soiling and edge/corner wear.
Lot of 32, including 11 with the back J.P. Ball's Photographic Gallery and 21 with Ball & Thomas backmarks (both in Cincinnati), including two of African American subjects. Several cartes ink identified on verso. J.P. Ball, a noted African American photographer, opened his first studio in Cincinnati, OH in 1845, then became an itinerant photographer, traveling to Pittsburgh, Richmond, and throughout Ohio. He eventually resettled in Cincinnati in 1849 and opened a Daguerreian Gallery downtown, which subsequently became one of the most well known galleries in the U.S. During the early 1850s, when Ball opened an additional gallery in Cincinnati, he hired his future brother-in-law, Alexander Thomas, to work with him, and by 1857, he became a full partner in the business. Ball and Thomas' gallery was soon known as "the finest photographic gallery west of the Allegheny Mountains." In March 1860, the partnership between J.P. Ball and Alexander Thomas dissolved, but J.P. Ball's younger brother, Thomas C. Ball, continued to work as a studio photographer with Alexander Thomas until his death in 1875. (Information obtained from the Cincinnati Historical Library: J.P. Ball Database, May 4, 2011.) Provenance: Dr. John W. Ravage Collection of African American Photography Condition: Most with only light soiling and edge/corner wear.
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