مولد الصور الذكاء الاصطناعي
v1
<strong>Unidentified member of The African Choir. <br> London, 1891 <br>By the London Stereoscopic Company. </strong> <br></br> © Hulton Archive/Getty Images. Courtesy of Hulton Archive, and Autograph ABP, London. Supported by the National Lottery through the Heritage Lottery Fund. <br></br> The African Choir was a group of fourteen young men and women, and two children, from South Africa, then under British rule. The choir toured Britain between 1891 and 1893 to raise funds to build a technical college on the Cape Coast, performing to great acclaim and large audiences at Crystal Palace, for members of the British aristocracy and leading political figures, and most notably for Queen Victoria at Osborne House, Isle of Wight. Their stage repertoire was divided into two halves: one comprised Christian hymns sung in English together with popular operatic arias and choruses; the other traditional African hymns. The choir appeared in traditional African dress, and in contemporary Victorian dress in response. <br></br> Fibre-based silver gelatin print, 20x24""