feface PPBW girl FEFACE woman eyes black hair brown eyes brown art white image thinking pensive thoughts sitting make up hairstyle fashion eighties sixties pose model lady time inside shot clothes sulky sullen pout
portrait, beauty, model, men, man one person, male beauty, stubble, leather jacket, handsome, looking, isolated on blacks, ethnic, Indian, Sri Lankan, studio, eye contact,
Aged; Asian Eyes; Asian Man; Character; Eyes; Faces; Generation; Looking; Old; Old Man; Old Thai Man; Thai Eyes; Thai Man; Thai Smile; Thailand; portrait, Thailand, Land of Smiles,
minstrel show black and white minstrels shows advertising poster blackface blacking up blacked face racial stereotypes stereotype prejudice prejudices faces race racism racist stereotypical racists nineteenth century US USA United States of America American African Americans 19th 20th twentieth entertainment attitude attitudes society social change changes changing advert adverts advertisement advertisements ad ads posters history historic historical heritage popular culture leisure activity activities print prints old lithograph lithographs lithography lithographic people graphic graphics caricature caricatures man men minstrelsy musical whites blacks colour coloured negro negroes black-face blacking-up blacked-up William H West West's Big Minstrel Jubilee
Description
Lithograph poster circa 1900 by Strobridge Lithograph Company advertising William H West's Big Minstrel Jubilee show. Minstrel shows consisted of comic skits, variety acts, dancing and music which were often performed by white people in blackface. They lampooned black Americans and tended to portray them as ignorant, lazy, superstitious and buffoonish – perpetuating the racist stereotype of the uneducated, always cheerful and highly musical black person. Minstrel shows grew up in the 1830s with white working class men dressing up as plantation slaves and survived as professional entertainment until the early years of the twentieth century. In their heyday the shows were famous and respectable but they are now regarded by many as a racist and shameful era in American popular entertainment.
minstrel show black and white minstrels shows advertising poster blackface blacking up blacked face racial stereotypes stereotype prejudice prejudices faces race racism racist stereotypical racists nineteenth century US USA United States of America American African Americans 19th 20th twentieth entertainment attitude attitudes society social change changes changing advert adverts advertisement advertisements ad ads posters history historic historical heritage popular culture leisure activity activities print prints old lithograph lithographs lithography lithographic people graphic graphics caricature caricatures man men minstrelsy musical whites blacks colour coloured negro negroes black-face blacking-up blacked-up William H West West's Big Minstrel Jubilee
Description
Lithograph poster circa 1899 by the Strobridge Lithograph Company advertising William H West's Big Minstrel Jubilee show. Minstrel shows consisted of comic skits, variety acts, dancing and music which were often performed by white people in blackface. They lampooned black Americans and tended to portray them as ignorant, lazy, superstitious and buffoonish – perpetuating the racist stereotype of the uneducated, always cheerful and highly musical black person. Minstrel shows grew up in the 1830s with white working class men dressing up as plantation slaves and survived as professional entertainment until the early years of the twentieth century. In their heyday the shows were famous and respectable but they are now regarded by many as a racist and shameful era in American popular entertainment.
minstrel show black and white minstrels shows advertising poster blackface blacking up blacked face racial stereotypes stereotype prejudice prejudices faces race racism racist stereotypical racists nineteenth century US USA United States of America American African Americans 19th 20th twentieth entertainment attitude attitudes society social change changes changing advert adverts advertisement advertisements ad ads posters history historic historical heritage popular culture leisure activity activities print prints old lithograph lithographs lithography lithographic people graphic graphics caricature caricatures man men minstrelsy musical whites blacks colour coloured negro negroes black-face blacking-up blacked-up Richards and Pringle Pringle's Famous Georgia Clarence Powell
Description
Lithograph poster circa 1907 by the US Lithograph Company advertising Richards and Pringle's Famous Georgia Minstrels show. Minstrel shows consisted of comic skits, variety acts, dancing and music which were often performed by white people in blackface. They lampooned black Americans and tended to portray them as ignorant, lazy, superstitious and buffoonish – perpetuating the racist stereotype of the uneducated, always cheerful and highly musical black person. Minstrel shows grew up in the 1830s with white working class men dressing up as plantation slaves and survived as professional entertainment until the early years of the twentieth century. In their heyday the shows were famous and respectable but they are now regarded by many as a racist and shameful era in American popular entertainment.
PPBW, ppbw, b&w, black and white, black & white, lady, girl, woman, female, young, make-up, mirror, reflection, a larger version of this image is available on request
PPBW, ppbw, woman, girl, lady, make-up, powder brush, black and white, black & white, b&w, mirror, reflection. A larger version of this image is available on request.
Banjo racial caricature black music racism racist race stereotypes stereotype stereotypical cartoon cartoons people person African American Americans USA US United States of America musical instrument instruments banjos negro negroes white prejudice prejudices racists nineteenth century 19th 20th twentieth attitude attitudes society musician musicians ethnic ethnicity social change changes changing popular entertainment entertainer entertainers cartoonish poster posters print prints history historic historical heritage culture leisure activity activities old lithograph lithographs lithography lithographic graphic graphics caricatures man men whites blacks colour coloured Calvert Lithograph Company top hat tuxedo drawing drawings sketch sketches art artwork slave slaves slavery
Description
Lithograph circa 1890 by Calvert Lithograph Company of a stereotypical African American in a tuxedo and top hat playing a banjo. African slaves in the United States fashioned banjos based on instruments in their homeland and the banjo often features in nineteenth century caricatures lampooning black people as (amongst other things) ignorant, buffoonish, always cheerful and highly musical.
PPBW girl infant child young pretty attractive eyes look hand holding fork eating annoyed go away repel intrusive black white portrait face dress shy Mandy Collins; Mc0431;
Man; men; human; Caucasian; Italian male; handsome man; young man; sunglasses; pink shirt; beard; brown eyes; smiling; Mediterranean; head and shoulders; portrait
Description
Italian man head and shoulders shot dressed in pink shirt and wearing sunglasses on head.
Alfred Nobel prize prizes Bernhard portrait Swedish famous Swede Swedes chemist chemists inventor inventors dynamite engineer engineers industrialist industrialists businessman businessmen invention inventions portraits black and white nineteenth century 19th history historic historical heritage legacy celebrated renowned figure figures man men male males people person discovery discoveries innovator innovators
Description
Undated portrait of Alfred Bernhard Nobel (1833 – 1896) – Swedish chemist, engineer, industrialist and the inventor of dynamite. He used his large fortune in his will to create the Nobel Prizes.