My last trip to Cleveland, I
was going through a box of old photographs and came across the following dramatic
portrait, obviously a singer or actress. Although the features seemed familiar,
I couldn't recall whose portrait this was, so I looked at the back, only to be
confronted with a blank expanse.
Mystery portrait: Who is she??? |
The identity was known when I
obtained it, but nothing was written on this large photo, which was likewise
dissociated from any receipts or catalog entries. In other words, an orphan
photograph. However, luck was watching out for me, for later a small album
yielded this late 19th century trade card of singer Sigrid Arnoldson, advertising
Lorillard tobacco:
This certainly looked like the
photo, and now that I had a name it was a matter of minutes to look on the
internet and confirm the identification with other Arnoldson photos from the same session, such as this
one on the delcampe.net website.
Sigrid Arnoldson, a famous
Swedish singer with an international career who lived from 1861 to 1943, was an
important part of the music scene in the late Nineteenth century. In a
manner reminiscent of Adelina Patti, Arnoldson combined the high status of classical singers with the relentless
merchandising of the period to enter the realm of popular culture. Her face and
name appear often in relics of the period, frequently in sets of trade cards
issued by tobacco and other companies.
Luckily, Arnoldson lived into
the era of early phonograph recordings, so her voice was preserved for the
future. That same visit, I opened a box
of old 78-RPM records stored in a cabinet, and miraculously there was Arnoldson's 1906
Berlin rendition of the Swiss Echo Song, a popular Victorian display piece.
(You may hear this recording, although not from my copy, on Youtube.)
The important lesson here is
that we are the custodians of the objects we collect, and there is no excuse to
allow identifying information to be lost. Names and locations should be written
on the backs of photographs with pencil (but please avoid ink or felt tips, which over
the years will bleed through).
Arnoldson's birthday is March
20th, which makes this an especially appropriate time to review her
story. I must have had a premonition that I would one day be called on to
celebrate her birthday: I was all prepared with this
c.1890
box of Sigrid Arnoldson
Birthday Candles! That is the pleasure of collecting—once someone like
Arnoldson registers on your mental radar, locating an insignificant object like
these candles becomes an occasion of great excitement and amusement.
Still filled with the original candles! |
The spirit of Sigrid
Arnoldson must have been at my elbow last summer, protecting her image from
neglect. Although most of my things are packed away in deep storage, it seems
that every time I opened a box I found an object related to her. A few days
before I left, one last very beautiful portrait from 1894 virtually materialized
in a folder of architectural photographs. She looks very relaxed now that I
have labeled her picture, and order has been restored!
Sigrid Arnoldson, March 20, 1861 – February 7, 1943 |
All photographs and original items, except as noted,
property of the author.