Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Turco

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François-Hippolyte Lalaisse (artist, 1812–84)
Ink drawing on paper
Algeria, 1848
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


The paper support of this costume study of a Zouave soldier has a distinctive texture: it feels unexpectedly smooth, as if sized (treated in a starch bath), then burnished with a polished stone. Such characteristics were common in paper products prepared in Islamicate societies like the former Ottoman region of Algiers. These details suggest that Lalaisse likely purchased this paper while traveling in Algeria. In 1857, Lalaisse accompanied his former drawing student, now diplomat Camille Silvy on a commission from the Minister of Public Instruction to draw buildings and scenes to encourage emigration to its new Algerian colony. The subject matter, mission, and materiality of this costume study embody the cultural translations that occurred during the French colonization of the region. Lalaisse’s eyewitness drawing on locally produced paper would later enable armchair travelers and popular illustrators to disseminate these images to potential emigrants in France.