Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Southworth, a druggist, and Hawes, a carpenter and self-taught painter, operated a daguerreotype studio together in Boston that served the city’s elite. Masters of the aesthetic and technical aspects of the medium, they built the first skylight in Boston to supply a clear, strong light in their studio. Another of their innovations was the addition of an extra layer of silver to their plates to enhance the luminosity and level of polish of their daguerreotypes. This medallion portrait is an example of the most difficult and expensive portrait mode of the 1850s. A daguerreotype plate was first masked and then a perforated template was moved around to take separate exposures on the same plate using a mechanism Southworth patented.
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Albert Sands Southworth|Josiah Johnson Hawes|Southworth and
Albert Sands Southworth|Josiah Johnson Hawes|Southworth and
Huddleston & Co. — Untitled (Portrait of a Woman)
Unknown Maker — Untitled (Portrait of a Woman)
Unknown — [Seated Young Woman Wearing a Shawl, Holding an Op
Unknown — Untitled
Unknown — Untitled
Unknown — [Seated Young Woman with Hand Raised to Jawline]
Southworth and Hawes|Albert Sands Southworth|Josiah Johnson
Unknown — Untitled
E. and Wm. Sage — Untitled (Portrait of a Woman)
Unknown maker
American, 19th century — Untitled (Portrait of