BLACKO_180512_067
Existing comment: Portable physiognotrace used by Raphaelle Peale
A physiognotrace allowed artists to trace the outline of a sitter's head and simultaneously record a small profile on a piece of paper. The silhouette head was then cut from the paper. The style of this portable case suggests a piece of furniture rather than a tool, perhaps to impress sitters. Raphaelle Peale traveled throughout America with this object, using it to cut silhouettes of everyone from Thomas Jefferson to ordinary citizens.
Physiognomy involves reading a person's character through his or her facial features, and while modern science disputes this notion, many people in the 1800s believed that a head's outline conveyed character and offered a means of classification.
Wood (mahogany) with ivory knobs and metal rod, early 19th century
Purchased through a generous donation from the Barra Foundation
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