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“The Largest Class of Corn Grown”, photographed by WH Martin and published by The North American Post Card Co. in 1908
Rijksmuseum
Rijksmuseum
Remember that image of the late Pope Francis from 2023 looking hip in a huge white puffer jacket? The photo went viral before it became clear that it was generated by the AI tool Midjourney. Fake images and videos are flooding the internet these days, but a new exhibition explores how people have been manipulating photos almost since the medium was invented.
Take this startling image of a giant ear of corn (above). It was made – or perhaps the better word was created – by WH Martin in 1908 as part of a series of postcards depicting unusual sized produce or livestock. Martin photograph each element of his scene, cutting and pasting the photos together before re-capturing the new image.
His work is part of the exhibition FAKE! Early photo collages and photo montagesthrough May 25 at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Below is a photomontage postcard from before 1908, a vision of a future New York where cars could fly. The colors were added later in the printing process and the outlines slightly retouched, giving it the appearance of a drawing even though it is a photograph.

“Car Flying Over Mulberry Bend Park, New York” published by Theodore Eisman before 1908.
Rijksmuseum
According to the Rijksmuseum, photographers began cutting and pasting images as early as 1860. The exhibition traces the development of image manipulation from then until World War II.
Below is a disturbing image of a cart with a huge head, dated between 1900 and 1910.

Photomontage by unknown author, made between 1900 and 1910
Rijksmuseum
Finally, the era’s delight in massive farm produce rears its head again in a 1908 postcard in which geese, dwarfed by their human owners, are driven to market.

Taking our Geese to market”, published by the Martin Post Card Company in 1908
Rijksmuseum
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