Dmitri Ivanovich Yermakov (Russian: Дмитрий Иванович Ермаков) (1846 – November 10, 1916) was a Russian photographer known for his series of the Caucasian photographs.
Dmitri Ivanovich Yermakov | |
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Born | Dmitri Ivanovich Caribaggio 1846 Tiflis, Russian Empire |
Died | 10 November 1916 | (aged 69–70)
Nationality | Russian |
Known for | Photographer |
Movement | Orientalist |
Life and career
editYermakov was born in Tiflis in 1846, the son of the Italian architect Luigi Caribaggio and a Georgian mother of Austrian descent. She remarried the Russian Ermakov whose surname her son Dmitry took. Trained as a military topographer, he took part in the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878).
As an adult, he operated photographic businesses in Tiflis. He traveled extensively as far as Iran and participated in several archaeological expeditions in the Caucasus, leaving a series of unique photographs. These photographs document the lifestyles, customs and costumes of Russian people in the late 19th-century forming an important ethnographic record of the region and its inhabitants. Thousands of his negatives are now kept at Georgian museums.[1]
Work
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Armenian noble woman from Tiflis, date unknown
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Girls and Aged Woman Djeg Settlement, 1880
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The House of Arshakuni, 1884–86
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Princess Lazarev in Tatar costume, date unknown
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A Jew with nuts, date unknown
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Georgians with national clothes, date unknown
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Kurd in the Russian service,
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Shah Abbas mosque in Ganja, early 1900s
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Rug Deal at the Tiflis Bazaar, date unknown
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The Oriental Bath, 1880
Bibliography
edit- Dimitri Ermakov In Iran (with Irina Koshoridze, Lika Mamatsashvili, Grigol Beradze), 2019, ISBN 9789941817564
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ John Hannavy (2008), Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-century Photography, pp. 494-5. CRC Press, ISBN 0-415-97235-3
External links
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