Washington, D.C., 1917. "St. Elizabeths, government hospital for the insane."

Shorpy09730a_preview 

[Shorpy: Harris & Ewing Collection glass negative, Library of Congress]

This photograph really needs to be seen full size.

The photographer isn't named, but what a picture this is. The focus on the back of the neck – there's somehow no more intimate defenceless part of the body than the nape of the neck, yet this isn't intrusive, as a modern photograph might be. The woman retains her dignity. The out-of-focus objects on the table – her knitting – just emphasise the disconnection, the isolation. The focus is on her…on her, sitting there, alone. The narrow shoulders under the chemise, the glasses, the wispy strands of hair…

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3 responses to “In the Institution”

  1. Richard Carter, FCD Avatar

    Amazing photograph.
    A few years ago, my friend Stense bought some old negatives in a second-hand bookshop. I converted them into positives for her. They were photographs from a First World War UK military hospital. Photos at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/gruts/sets/72157603593846911/detail/

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  2. Mick H Avatar
    Mick H

    Interesting photos, thanks. That “recovering soldier” looks well cared for.

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  3. SnoopyTheGoon Avatar

    It’s simply exquisite. Another reminder that the photography of these days was not worse than the contemporary – neither in skills nor in quality.

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