{"secondaryobjectnumber":null,"periodterms":[],"creditline":"Museum Collection","caption":"Stereoscopic viewer. Wood, metal hardware, and lenses; 9 × 18.2 × 32 cm. Museum Collection (ui.2012.3168)","cultureterms":[],"type":"artobject","dimensionsproposed":"","terms":[],"geography":[],"dimensionelements":[{"element":"Overall","type":"Height","units":"centimeters","dimension":"9.00"},{"element":"Overall","type":"Width","units":"centimeters","dimension":"18.20"},{"element":"Overall","type":"Depth","units":"centimeters","dimension":"32.00"}],"markings":null,"accessionyear":null,"newaccession":0,"makers":[],"datecomputed":null,"signed":null,"restrictions":null,"classification":"Tools / Equipment / Implements","packages":[{"packageid":278831,"name":"10282025-DAY1-ONVIEW"},{"packageid":213011,"name":"Gallery_18-Photography"},{"packageid":224467,"name":"web_Bainbridge3791"}],"catalograisonne":null,"classifications":[],"exhibitions":[{"exhibitionid":3791,"citation":"In his photography-centered multimedia practice, the artist Dor Guez considers the roles of art, architecture, music, and monuments in shaping the identity of a place. His work is a form of storytelling that focuses on unwritten histories. Colony / Dor Guez features photographs, installations, and the US premiere of a video that the artist created based on historical photographs in the archives of the American Colony. Established in Jerusalem in 1881, the American Colony was a Christian community formed by a group of American and then Swedish expats who maintained their philanthropic commune through Ottoman, British, Jordanian, and Israeli rule. In the early twentieth century, the American Colony produced and sold hundreds of photographic views as souvenirs of the region. Guez mines these holdings, selecting photographs that contain latent histories of the multiple communities who draw connections between their identity and this geography. He mirrors, juxtaposes, enlarges, and filters these pictures to reveal how they accrue meanings over time and offer shifting views of the region’s past and present.","isvirtual":true,"begindate":"2022-12-10","enddate":"2023-02-12","uri":"https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/art/exhibitions/3791"}],"cultures":[],"primaryimage":["https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/PUAM22_3220"],"displaytitle":"Stereoscopic viewer","displayculture":null,"displaymaker":null,"captionhtml":"<i>Stereoscopic viewer</i>. Wood, metal hardware, and lenses; 9 × 18.2 × 32 cm. Museum Collection (ui.2012.3168)","displaydate":null,"medium":"Wood, metal hardware, and lenses","media":[{"id":239920,"uri":"https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/PUAM22_3220","isprimary":1,"rank":1,"mediatypeid":1,"mediaviewtype":"(not assigned)","restrictions":null,"caption":"PUAM Photo (composite photo with ui.2012.3168 and AB-2022-130)"}],"displayperiod":null,"extended_content":false,"campuscollections":"false","bibliography":[],"nowebuse":"True","periods":[],"department":"Photography","attribute_groups":[{"id":2199326,"term":"Photography","termtype":"Collecting Area"}],"daterange":"","dateend":0,"depicted":[],"titles":[{"title":"Stereoscopic viewer","titletype":"Primary Title","displayorder":1}],"hasimage":"true","creditlinerepro":null,"objectnumber":"ui.2012.3168","inscribed":null,"texts":[{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Provenance","textentryhtml":"Purchased by Peter Bunnell (1937-2021); acquired by the Princeton University Art Museum, 2012. ","remarks":"Peter Bunnell was the inaugural David Hunter McAlpin Professor of the History of Photography and Modern Art at Princeton as well as curator of photography, Museum director from 1973 to 1978, and acting director again from 1998 to 2000, Bunnell purchased this, among many other objects, for his course What Photographs Look Like. He used these objects as teaching tools, as he believed that photographs and photographic tools should be used and examined in the learning process."}],"datebegin":0,"sortnumber":"i      2012u 3168","published_date":"2026-03-05 10:54:33.833714","objectid":80753,"dimensions":"9 × 18.2 × 32 cm (3 9/16 × 7 3/16 × 12 5/8 in.)","on_view":true}