Exhibiting the West at the Paris Exposition of 1867: Towards a New American Aesthetic Identity?

The Exposition Universelle of 1867 was the second of its kind to be held in Paris and was the largest to date. In 1867 the French Second Empire’s “social” doctrine staged industry and labor not only as economic values but as cultural facts, envisioned in socio-ethnographic terms if not as forms of s...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: François Brunet, Jessica Talley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Française d'Etudes Américaines 2019-06-01
Series:Transatlantica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/11280
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832580648756314112
author François Brunet
Jessica Talley
author_facet François Brunet
Jessica Talley
author_sort François Brunet
collection DOAJ
description The Exposition Universelle of 1867 was the second of its kind to be held in Paris and was the largest to date. In 1867 the French Second Empire’s “social” doctrine staged industry and labor not only as economic values but as cultural facts, envisioned in socio-ethnographic terms if not as forms of spectacle. The United States was only a second-tier player; however, for the U.S. organizers the Paris Exposition was a crucial opportunity for the country as it just emerged from the Civil War and entered Reconstruction. This paper seeks to identify aesthetic concerns and, more generally, an ambition to seduce the gaze of French and international viewers through the general organization and specific displays of the American exhibition, concentrating on exhibits offered by the Western states and territories. Images and objects from this region—particularly between the Rocky Mountains and California—played a significant, if perhaps unexpected, role in shaping a new aesthetic identity that potentially extended to the entire US exhibition. The display of Western photographs inaugurated a trend that pushed geographical imageries, especially of so-called new lands, into greater visibility. The Paris Exposition of 1867 seems to have been a pivotal moment in the use of geographical imageries, and their ability to link economic and aesthetic values. In the context of this Exposition western photography, natural specimens and material culture of the post-Civil War era contributed to renovating the French and European view of America—substituting specific objects and pictures for an abstract idea and creating, for the first time perhaps, a strong aesthetic appeal for American pictures that were no longer the clichés understood by the phrase “American images.”
format Article
id doaj-art-ceb8336c6da44c9c9ef632125e104777
institution Kabale University
issn 1765-2766
language English
publishDate 2019-06-01
publisher Association Française d'Etudes Américaines
record_format Article
series Transatlantica
spelling doaj-art-ceb8336c6da44c9c9ef632125e1047772025-01-30T10:46:23ZengAssociation Française d'Etudes AméricainesTransatlantica1765-27662019-06-01210.4000/transatlantica.11280Exhibiting the West at the Paris Exposition of 1867: Towards a New American Aesthetic Identity?François BrunetJessica TalleyThe Exposition Universelle of 1867 was the second of its kind to be held in Paris and was the largest to date. In 1867 the French Second Empire’s “social” doctrine staged industry and labor not only as economic values but as cultural facts, envisioned in socio-ethnographic terms if not as forms of spectacle. The United States was only a second-tier player; however, for the U.S. organizers the Paris Exposition was a crucial opportunity for the country as it just emerged from the Civil War and entered Reconstruction. This paper seeks to identify aesthetic concerns and, more generally, an ambition to seduce the gaze of French and international viewers through the general organization and specific displays of the American exhibition, concentrating on exhibits offered by the Western states and territories. Images and objects from this region—particularly between the Rocky Mountains and California—played a significant, if perhaps unexpected, role in shaping a new aesthetic identity that potentially extended to the entire US exhibition. The display of Western photographs inaugurated a trend that pushed geographical imageries, especially of so-called new lands, into greater visibility. The Paris Exposition of 1867 seems to have been a pivotal moment in the use of geographical imageries, and their ability to link economic and aesthetic values. In the context of this Exposition western photography, natural specimens and material culture of the post-Civil War era contributed to renovating the French and European view of America—substituting specific objects and pictures for an abstract idea and creating, for the first time perhaps, a strong aesthetic appeal for American pictures that were no longer the clichés understood by the phrase “American images.”https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/11280photographyAmerican Westhistory of photographyWestern HistoryFrench-American cultural exchangeexhibition studies
spellingShingle François Brunet
Jessica Talley
Exhibiting the West at the Paris Exposition of 1867: Towards a New American Aesthetic Identity?
Transatlantica
photography
American West
history of photography
Western History
French-American cultural exchange
exhibition studies
title Exhibiting the West at the Paris Exposition of 1867: Towards a New American Aesthetic Identity?
title_full Exhibiting the West at the Paris Exposition of 1867: Towards a New American Aesthetic Identity?
title_fullStr Exhibiting the West at the Paris Exposition of 1867: Towards a New American Aesthetic Identity?
title_full_unstemmed Exhibiting the West at the Paris Exposition of 1867: Towards a New American Aesthetic Identity?
title_short Exhibiting the West at the Paris Exposition of 1867: Towards a New American Aesthetic Identity?
title_sort exhibiting the west at the paris exposition of 1867 towards a new american aesthetic identity
topic photography
American West
history of photography
Western History
French-American cultural exchange
exhibition studies
url https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/11280
work_keys_str_mv AT francoisbrunet exhibitingthewestattheparisexpositionof1867towardsanewamericanaestheticidentity
AT jessicatalley exhibitingthewestattheparisexpositionof1867towardsanewamericanaestheticidentity