N E Lusher (4 results)

Published by Hamilton, Bermuda, 1910 (circa) 1910
Seller: Pennymead Books PBFA, Knaresborough, United KingdomPennymead Books PBFA
Contact seller5-star sellerCondition: Used
US$ 76.84
US$ 20.16 shippingShips from United Kingdom to U.S.A.Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketAdvertising folding card with 'Value of Dollars in Sterling Money' currency table and two photo images of Bermuda.

Published by , 1890 (circa) 1890
Seller: Pennymead Books PBFA, Knaresborough, United KingdomPennymead Books PBFA
Contact seller5-star sellerCondition: Used
US$ 184.39
US$ 20.16 shippingShips from United Kingdom to U.S.A.Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketOriginal old photograph mounted on photographer's mount, 9.5 x 7.5" A few minor stains otherwise fine.
More imagesPublished by [Bermuda] 1890
Seller: Libreria de Antano (ILAB & ABA Members), Miami, U.S.A.Libreria de Antano (ILAB & ABA Members)
Contact seller5-star sellerCondition: Very good copy. vols. 4to. 18 pp. 19th CENTURY BERMUDA, IN PICTURES BY A RENOWNED BERMUDA PHOTOGRAPHER. Eighteen thick albumen prints, each about 7¼ x 9 inches. On original plain cardboard mounts, all but two captioned in the negative. A wonderful collection of eighteen large cabinet cards produced by noted American-B…ermudian photographer Nicholas Ethelbert Lusher (1859-1932). Lusher was Bermuda's leading photographer of the late-19th century, whose images remain an important contemporary record of Bermuda and her people. The imperial cabinet cards in the present collection bear no credit line or backmark, as usual with Lusher images, but some, such as "Packing Onions," are credited to Lusher elsewhere, and all are clearly part of a series, given the nature of the negative captions and the uniform mounts. The images feature prominent architecture, street scenes, an elevated view of St. George's, coastal views, parks, and a healthy selection of flora and fauna. Some of the images feature local people posed for the scene, including Black laborers and other domestic workers, most notably in the aforementioned "Packing Onions" photograph. The photographs present here, in numerical order, are as follows: 5. Hamilton Hotel.12. Cedar Avenue.15. The Bridge.19. Bermuda Cottage.23. Cochineal Cactus.26. Royal Palms.27. Screw Palm.37. Paw Paw Tree.39. Palmettoes. 45. St. George 's.48. Packing Onions.57. View Near Norwood.68. Mr. W. Whitney's Residence.73. Pitt's Bay.91. St. George's Park, W.92. St. George's Park, E. +[Untitled field of flowers] + [Untitled view of a large ship in the harbor]. "Pioneer photographer N.E. Lusher captured the essence of Bermuda's people in the late 1800s. It's perhaps just as well that Nicholas Ethelbert Lusher was a photographer. He left behind an invaluable pictorial record of Bermudians at the turn of the twentieth century, yet relatively little is known about the man himself. He appears to have left no documentation or letters about his pictures and few news clippings or articles. And while he is frequently mentioned in historical Bermuda books, most notably The Bermudian's own Celebrating the First 100 Years of Photography in Bermuda, published in 1989, he has yet to receive the 'coffee table' treatment given to other, perhaps less-gifted photographers. Perhaps because of the paucity of information available about him, any shows of his work have focused on the subjects, rather than the man himself. Even Lusher's descendants, who include local art dealer and collector Nicholas Lusher, seems to know little about the man himself other than his photographic legacy. But this much appears to be true: N.E. was an 'adopted' Bermudian, having been born on Turks Island in 1859, the son of Captain and Mrs. James A. Lusher, and died in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, in September 1932. An obituary in The Royal Gazette that called him 'a pioneer in the photographic art in Bermuda' reads: 'Unassuming to the last, Mr. Lusher took no active part in local government affairs, though he was always keen and oft-times critical observer. In an unostentatious manner, he performed many charitable works which will long endear him to many.' The same obituary records that after spending his early childhood on Turks Island, the family moved to Belfast, Maine, and it was while in Maine that the family began to make frequent trips to Bermuda. Quite how and when N.E. came to be involved in the relatively new medium of photography is not clear. Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre only published his historic manual on how to permanently reproduce a print on a metal plate 20 years before Lusher was born, and the first known photographs of Bermuda date back to the early 1850s. According to Celebrating the First 100 Years of Photography in Bermuda, Lusher was a contemporary and personal friend of George Eastman, who invented the revolutionary Kodak camera in 1888, but Lusher declined Eastman's offer of shares in his fledgling company! By 1880, Lusher had moved permanently to Bermuda and opened his own photographic business, N.E. Lusher & Sun [sic], at 42 Front Street; he also had a studio on Queen Street. The name of the company was not a misspelling but demonstrated Lusher's sense of humour, acknowledging that solar energy was the natural source of light for his work" (In: Lusher's Lens," The Bermudian, June 2, 2024.
More imagesPublished by [Bermuda. ca. 1890]. 1890
Seller: William Reese Company, New York, U.S.A.William Reese Company
Contact seller5-star sellerCondition: Used
US$ 10,000.00
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Add to basketA handsome 19th-century photo album which includes the work of one of the great photographers of Bermuda. Three of the images have been definitely attributed to N.E. Lusher - the first, showing the construction of a gangway to a docked vessel (the SS Trinidad) at Hamilton; the eighth image, showing a shaded crossroads; and the c…harming ninth image of a Black woman and a young boy seated in a donkey cart. The remainder of the album includes a number of images of Bermuda subjects which are of a similarly high quality which suggest that they are all the work of Lusher. Lusher apparently worked as a professional photographer from 1882 onwards, and is known for a wide range of work. His success more or less tied in with the explosion of tourism to the island that followed the first visit of Princess Louise to Bermuda in 1883. The images in the present album offer a good selection of the best of his work. They range from the reportage of the dock scenes, to the topographical images of the lighthouse and other island locations, to the true art of landscape photography, to the whimsy of images which feature the local inhabitants. Eighteen of the photographs have been identified as images of Bermuda, while the remainder show unidentified American coastal towns, possibly Nova Scotia, including an image of a coastal fortification, possibly in Halifax. The Bermuda images include a view of the docks at St. George's; a view of the town of St. George's; a stone quarry; royal palms on the road to Paget; a donkey cart; Gibb's Hill Lighthouse; a field of Easter lilies; and stalactites, possibly in the Crystal Cave. Oblong folio. Contemporary black cloth, neatly rebacked and recornered in contemporary black morocco, gilt. Light wear and soiling to cards. Images generally crisp and clean. Very good plus.