Photography Caravan of Camels

Photography Caravan of Camels

CC BY-SA 4.0

CC BY-SA 4.0 europeana.eu

A black-and-white photograph showing a camel caravan passing a peasant settlement. In the foreground stands a boy with a flock of sheep. In the background are passers-by and the slopes of the settlement. Camels and camel caravans are a common subject of early photographers in China. Camel transports entered China via the northern route through Central Asia and what is now the Xinjiang 新疆 Autonomous Region. Camels were used to transport goods locally, especially coal from nearby mines. In addition, silk, tea, and other goods were transported along the famous Silk Road to Central Asia and Europe. Fewer people had access to camels than owned donkeys or mules. In China, camels were called “desert ships” because of the way they were able to walk on sand.

The photograph is the 144th of 449 photographs of Beijing and its surroundings in the album of Ivan Skušek Jr., purchased during his stay in Beijing (1914–1920). In the handwritten inventory of the album, the photograph ... more

A black-and-white photograph showing a camel caravan passing a peasant settlement. In the foreground stands a boy with a flock of sheep. In the background are passers-by and the slopes of the settlement. Camels and camel caravans are a common subject of early photographers in China. Camel transports entered China via the northern route through Central Asia and what is now the Xinjiang 新疆 Autonomous Region. Camels were used to transport goods locally, especially coal from nearby mines. In addition, silk, tea, and other goods were transported along the famous Silk Road to Central Asia and Europe. Fewer people had access to camels than owned donkeys or mules. In China, camels were called “desert ships” because of the way they were able to walk on sand.

The photograph is the 144th of 449 photographs of Beijing and its surroundings in the album of Ivan Skušek Jr., purchased during his stay in Beijing (1914–1920). In the handwritten inventory of the album, the photograph is referred to as Kameele-Karavane. (DZ, MV)

Place of manufacture: Beijing
Manufacturing technique: black-and-white photograph
Dimensions: length: 14.1 cm, width: 8.5 cm
No. of parts: 1
Current owner: Slovene Ethnographic Museum
Date of the last acquisition: 1963
Previous owners and periods of ownership: Ivan Skušek, Jr. and Tsuneko Kondō Kawase - Marija Skušek, National Museum of Slovenia, Slovene Ethnographic Museum
Object condition, handling and damage: bluish discolouration of black colour

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