lantern slide
Object NameMagic Lantern Slide with Story of Mère Biquette
Made FromGlass, Paint, Paper
Dateabout 1900
Place MadeFrance
TechniqueCold painted
SizeOverall H: 6.5 cm, W: 25.5, D: 0.3
Accession Number2017.3.10 C
Credit LineGift of Magdeleine and Marcel Wellner
Curatorial Area(s)
Not On View
Physical DescriptionMagic Lantern Slide with Story of Mère Biquette. Colorless flat glass, multicolored paint, green paper; cold painted. Rectangular glass slide with two hand-painted scenes. The scene on the left, titled "Mere Biquette No. 7", depicts an anthropomorphized woodland animal man following an anthropomorphized woodland animal woman. The scene on the right, titled "Mere Biquette No. 8", depicts an anthropomorphized woodland animal man knocking on the door of a house.Provenance
Source
Magdeleine Wellner
- 2017-06-07
The slides have been in the family of the donor, Magdalene Wellner, for at least 70 years. Mrs. Wellner grew up in Belgium and remembers the slides from her early childhood, but does not know when or how they were acquired. She stated her husband used to project them in the home by shining a light behind them. The notecard accompanying the donation stated that they were “inherited around 1900 or 1800 from Belgium.”
The slides have been in the family of the donor, Magdalene Wellner, for at least 70 years. Mrs. Wellner grew up in Belgium and remembers the slides from her early childhood, but does not know when or how they were acquired. She stated her husband used to project them in the home by shining a light behind them. The notecard accompanying the donation stated that they were “inherited around 1900 or 1800 from Belgium.”
Source
Marcel Wellner
- 2017-06-07
The slides have been in the family of the donor, Magdalene Wellner, for at least 70 years. Mrs. Wellner grew up in Belgium and remembers the slides from her early childhood, but does not know when or how they were acquired. She stated her husband used to project them in the home by shining a light behind them. The notecard accompanying the donation stated that they were “inherited around 1900 or 1800 from Belgium.”
The slides have been in the family of the donor, Magdalene Wellner, for at least 70 years. Mrs. Wellner grew up in Belgium and remembers the slides from her early childhood, but does not know when or how they were acquired. She stated her husband used to project them in the home by shining a light behind them. The notecard accompanying the donation stated that they were “inherited around 1900 or 1800 from Belgium.”
about 1900
about 1900
about 1900
about 1900
about 1900
about 1900