Rare Portrait Ambrotypes of Japanese People From the Late 19th Century

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In the late 19th century, as Japan navigated the transformative Meiji Era, the ambrotype, known locally as garasu-shashin (glass photos), became a cherished medium for capturing the nation’s changing identity. Unlike the fleeting paper prints of the time, these underexposed glass negatives, backed with black material to create a positive image, offered a hauntingly sharp and ethereal depth.

Sourced from tokyogaz, these portraits are remarkable for their cultural synthesis, they often depict subjects in a state of flux. Typically encased in custom-carved Kiri-wood (Paulownia) boxes, these ambrotypes were treated not merely as photographs, but as sacred family talismans, preserving the stoic dignity and quiet grace of a society standing on the threshold of the modern world.
Ambrotype in pawlonia wood case. Father and son in kimono and tabi, January 2, 1882

Ambrotype of 3-year-old boy named Sawa Genzo

Ambrotype of a 19-year-old man, April 8, 1888

Ambrotype of Japanese gentleman named Suzuki Gohei in kimono, 1898

Ambrotype of three men seated at a table, upon which there is a stack of books. One of the men has a ‘chon-mage’ or top-knot

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