[Camp of the Thirty-second Regiment Indiana Volunteers, Company A, near Stones River, Tennessee, January 1863]. Camp scene featuring private Jacob Labinsky (center) as the victim of a practical joke; a character standing with arms crossed, resembling Colonel Francis Erdelmeyer (left background), watches the activity with the other troops — Source.
Featured on PDR in the collection The Civil War Sketches of Adolph Metzner (1861–64)
From gilt-framed ambrotypes of glassy-eyed new recruits to grim and grainy shots of the muddy dead, the American Civil War was the first major conflict to leave behind an extensive photographic record. Apart from the stylised scenes of battle that found their way on to painted canvas, it is perhaps to these photographs that one might automatically tend if asked to think of the visual record of the war. However, in both the photographic record and the more official war art, as engaging as they can be, there does seem to be something important missing: the immediacy and intimacy of everyday life as a soldier. This is why the collection of sketches, drawings, and watercolours left to us by Adolph G. Metzner — during his…
















