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
Children have always been particularly cherished subjects for photography. Portraits were made to preserve the memory of their stages of growth and, in an age when long-distance travel was rare, to share with faraway relatives. And, for a sadder reason: in 1840 an estimated one-third of children died before age five. Photography offered grieving parents the opportunity to immortalize their children’s features. This tragic genre of photographs, later called “post-mortems,” often depicts the children in fine clothing, laying down with eyes shut, as if merely napping.
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Unknown — [Three Children in Costume]
Bennet — [Boy and Girl Holding Hands]
Samuel Broadbent — Untitled (Portrait of a Girl and a Boy)
Unknown — [Two Girls]
Unknown Maker — Untitled (Portrait of Two Girls)
Boy with hobby horse
Mathew B. Brady — Grenville Kane
Mother with son with blind right eye
Unknown Maker — Untitled (Portrait of a Girl and Two Boys)
Boy with Cigar
John Adams Whipple — Untitled (Portrait of Seated Woman and
Unknown — Abby Frances Snow, 2 1/2 years old