For 15 years, photographer Drew Gardner has been recreating some of history’s most iconic portraits using the subjects’ great-grandchildren.
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1 of 39Clive of India as depicted in Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive, by Nathaniel Dance. 1773.Wikimedia Commons 2 of 39Robert Holden, the fifth great-grandson of Clive of India.Drew Gardner 3 of 39Founding Father and third U.S. President, Thomas Jefferson. He famously raped Sally Hemings, a 14-year-old slave of his, and operated a lucrative nail factory run by child slaves.Wikimedia Commons 4 of 39The sixth great-grandson of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, Shannon LaNier. On his ancestor, Jefferson, LaNier said, “He was a brilliant man who preached equality, but he didn’t practice it. He owned people. And now I’m here because of it.“Drew Gardner 5 of 39English Romantic poet William Wordsworth, who was largely responsible for launching the Romantic Age in English literature. Portrait by William Shuter. 1798.Cornell University 6 of 39The third great-grandson of William Wordsworth, Tom Wontner.Drew Gardner 7 of 39William Wilberforce, a British politician, philanthropist, and abolitionist leader.Wikimedia Commons 8 of 39A descendant of William Wilberforce.Drew Gardner 9 of 39Arthur Wellesley, the 1st Duke of Wellington, as painted by Sir Thomas Lawrence in 1824.U.K. Government Art Collection 10 of 39Jeremy Clyde — the great, great, great-grandson of the 1st Duke of Wellington, Arthur Wellesley.Drew Gardner 11 of 39American suffragette and abolitionist Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Photographed around the time of London’s anti-slavery convention in 1840.The Smithsonian 12 of 39The third great-granddaughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Elizabeth Jenkins-Sahlin.Drew Gardner 13 of 39Robert Falcon Scott, otherwise known as Scott of the Antarctic, photographed by Herbert Ponting in 1912.Wikimedia Commons 14 of 39Robert Falcon Scott’s grandson, Falcon Scott.Drew Gardner 15 of 39Napoleon in His Study, by Jacques-Louis David. 1812.Wikimedia Commons 16 of 39The fourth great-grandson of Napoleon Bonaparte, Hugo de Salis.Drew Gardner 17 of 39Geronimo, “the one who yawns” — who fought against Mexican and U.S. military campaigns in Mexico, New Mexico, and Arizona, in the mid-1800s.Wikimedia Commons 18 of 39Robert Geronimo, descendant of the world-renowned leader of the Bedonkohe tribe of Apaches of the 1800s.Drew Gardner 19 of 39Charles Dickens — author of A Christmas Carol, A Tale of Two Cities, Oliver Twist, and Great Expectations.Public Domain 20 of 39The great, great-grandson of British author Charles Dickens, Gerald Charles Dickens.Drew Gardner 21 of 39Frederick Douglass, the most photographed American of the 19th century, who had to flee the country as a fugitive slave.Public Domain 22 of 39The third great-grandson of Frederick Douglass, Kenneth Morris.Drew Gardner 23 of 39Édouard Manet’s Berthe Morisot with a Bouquet of Violets (in mourning for her father), 1872.Wikimedia Commons 24 of 39Lucie Rouart, the great-granddaughter of Berthe Morisot. Gardner shot this photo in London for an authentic recreation of the painting.Drew Gardner 25 of 39Charles II reigned over England, Scotland, and Ireland and died of an apoplectic fit in 1685 at Whitehall Palace.
He’s seen here painted by Philippe de Champaigne in 1653, while in exile in Normandy as Oliver Cromwell’s forces threatened his position.Wikimedia Commons 26 of 39Lord Charles FitzRoy, the ninth great-grandson of Charles II.Drew Gardner 27 of 39David Livingstone was a Scottish physician, pioneer Christian missionary, and anti-slavery crusader. 1864.Wikimedia Commons 28 of 39Descendant of David Livingstone.Drew Gardner 29 of 39British women’s rights activist and leader of the U.K. suffragette movement, Emmeline Pankhurst. 1906.Ethyl Smith, Female Pipings in Eden, 1934. 30 of 39Helen Pankhurst, great-granddaughter of British suffragette leader Emmeline Pankhurst.Drew Gardner 31 of 39A portrait of Horatio Nelson from 1800 by Friedrich Heinrich Fuger.Royal Naval Museum, Portsmouth, U.K. 32 of 39The fourth great-grandson of Horatio Nelson, William John Raglan Horatio Tribe.Drew Gardner 33 of 39English civil engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, as photographed by Robert Howlett in 1857. Brunel helped usher England into the Industrial age by designing and building railway lines, bridges, tunnels, and docks. National Portrait Gallery 34 of 39Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s third great-grandson, Isambard Thomas.Drew Gardner 35 of 39The most well-known piece of art in the world, the Mona Lisa, depicting Lisa del Giocondo, Leonardo da Vinci. 1503-1506.Wikimedia Commons 36 of 39Irina Guicciardini Strozzi, the 15th great-granddaughter of Mona Lisa subject Lisa del Giocondo.Drew Gardner 37 of 39Portrait of Oliver Cromwell, by Robert Walker, 1654.Robert Walker 38 of 39Oliver Cromwell’s ninth great-grandson, Charles Bush.Drew Gardner 39 of 39Like this gallery?Share it:
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19 Side-By-Side Portraits Of Famous People From History And Their Modern Descendants View Gallery
Drew Gardner has always been interested in telling stories that highlight what he believes are important issues of our time. The English photographer’s latest project saw him photograph recreations of portraits of world-renowned historical figures — using their modern-day descendants.
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1 of 39Clive of India as depicted in Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive, by Nathaniel Dance. 1773.Wikimedia Commons 2 of 39Robert Holden, the fifth great-grandson of Clive of India.Drew Gardner 3 of 39Founding Father and third U.S. President, Thomas Jefferson. He famously raped Sally Hemings, a 14-year-old slave of his, and operated a lucrative nail factory run by child slaves.Wikimedia Commons 4 of 39The sixth great-grandson of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, Shannon LaNier. On his ancestor, Jefferson, LaNier said, “He was a brilliant man who preached equality, but he didn’t practice it. He owned people. And now I’m here because of it.“Drew Gardner 5 of 39English Romantic poet William Wordsworth, who was largely responsible for launching the Romantic Age in English literature. Portrait by William Shuter. 1798.Cornell University 6 of 39The third great-grandson of William Wordsworth, Tom Wontner.Drew Gardner 7 of 39William Wilberforce, a British politician, philanthropist, and abolitionist leader.Wikimedia Commons 8 of 39A descendant of William Wilberforce.Drew Gardner 9 of 39Arthur Wellesley, the 1st Duke of Wellington, as painted by Sir Thomas Lawrence in 1824.U.K. Government Art Collection 10 of 39Jeremy Clyde — the great, great, great-grandson of the 1st Duke of Wellington, Arthur Wellesley.Drew Gardner 11 of 39American suffragette and abolitionist Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Photographed around the time of London’s anti-slavery convention in 1840.The Smithsonian 12 of 39The third great-granddaughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Elizabeth Jenkins-Sahlin.Drew Gardner 13 of 39Robert Falcon Scott, otherwise known as Scott of the Antarctic, photographed by Herbert Ponting in 1912.Wikimedia Commons 14 of 39Robert Falcon Scott’s grandson, Falcon Scott.Drew Gardner 15 of 39Napoleon in His Study, by Jacques-Louis David. 1812.Wikimedia Commons 16 of 39The fourth great-grandson of Napoleon Bonaparte, Hugo de Salis.Drew Gardner 17 of 39Geronimo, “the one who yawns” — who fought against Mexican and U.S. military campaigns in Mexico, New Mexico, and Arizona, in the mid-1800s.Wikimedia Commons 18 of 39Robert Geronimo, descendant of the world-renowned leader of the Bedonkohe tribe of Apaches of the 1800s.Drew Gardner 19 of 39Charles Dickens — author of A Christmas Carol, A Tale of Two Cities, Oliver Twist, and Great Expectations.Public Domain 20 of 39The great, great-grandson of British author Charles Dickens, Gerald Charles Dickens.Drew Gardner 21 of 39Frederick Douglass, the most photographed American of the 19th century, who had to flee the country as a fugitive slave.Public Domain 22 of 39The third great-grandson of Frederick Douglass, Kenneth Morris.Drew Gardner 23 of 39Édouard Manet’s Berthe Morisot with a Bouquet of Violets (in mourning for her father), 1872.Wikimedia Commons 24 of 39Lucie Rouart, the great-granddaughter of Berthe Morisot. Gardner shot this photo in London for an authentic recreation of the painting.Drew Gardner 25 of 39Charles II reigned over England, Scotland, and Ireland and died of an apoplectic fit in 1685 at Whitehall Palace.
He’s seen here painted by Philippe de Champaigne in 1653, while in exile in Normandy as Oliver Cromwell’s forces threatened his position.Wikimedia Commons 26 of 39Lord Charles FitzRoy, the ninth great-grandson of Charles II.Drew Gardner 27 of 39David Livingstone was a Scottish physician, pioneer Christian missionary, and anti-slavery crusader. 1864.Wikimedia Commons 28 of 39Descendant of David Livingstone.Drew Gardner 29 of 39British women’s rights activist and leader of the U.K. suffragette movement, Emmeline Pankhurst. 1906.Ethyl Smith, Female Pipings in Eden, 1934. 30 of 39Helen Pankhurst, great-granddaughter of British suffragette leader Emmeline Pankhurst.Drew Gardner 31 of 39A portrait of Horatio Nelson from 1800 by Friedrich Heinrich Fuger.Royal Naval Museum, Portsmouth, U.K. 32 of 39The fourth great-grandson of Horatio Nelson, William John Raglan Horatio Tribe.Drew Gardner 33 of 39English civil engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, as photographed by Robert Howlett in 1857. Brunel helped usher England into the Industrial age by designing and building railway lines, bridges, tunnels, and docks. National Portrait Gallery 34 of 39Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s third great-grandson, Isambard Thomas.Drew Gardner 35 of 39The most well-known piece of art in the world, the Mona Lisa, depicting Lisa del Giocondo, Leonardo da Vinci. 1503-1506.Wikimedia Commons 36 of 39Irina Guicciardini Strozzi, the 15th great-granddaughter of Mona Lisa subject Lisa del Giocondo.Drew Gardner 37 of 39Portrait of Oliver Cromwell, by Robert Walker, 1654.Robert Walker 38 of 39Oliver Cromwell’s ninth great-grandson, Charles Bush.Drew Gardner 39 of 39Like this gallery?Share it:
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66 Side-By-Side Shots Of Biopic Stars And The Real People They Portrayed
Where Are Their Kids? The Living Descendants Of Famous Historical Figures
44 Colorized Portraits That Reveal Historical Figures As They Truly Were
1 of 39Clive of India as depicted in Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive, by Nathaniel Dance. 1773.Wikimedia Commons 2 of 39Robert Holden, the fifth great-grandson of Clive of India.Drew Gardner 3 of 39Founding Father and third U.S. President, Thomas Jefferson. He famously raped Sally Hemings, a 14-year-old slave of his, and operated a lucrative nail factory run by child slaves.Wikimedia Commons 4 of 39The sixth great-grandson of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, Shannon LaNier. On his ancestor, Jefferson, LaNier said, “He was a brilliant man who preached equality, but he didn’t practice it. He owned people. And now I’m here because of it.“Drew Gardner 5 of 39English Romantic poet William Wordsworth, who was largely responsible for launching the Romantic Age in English literature. Portrait by William Shuter. 1798.Cornell University 6 of 39The third great-grandson of William Wordsworth, Tom Wontner.Drew Gardner 7 of 39William Wilberforce, a British politician, philanthropist, and abolitionist leader.Wikimedia Commons 8 of 39A descendant of William Wilberforce.Drew Gardner 9 of 39Arthur Wellesley, the 1st Duke of Wellington, as painted by Sir Thomas Lawrence in 1824.U.K. Government Art Collection 10 of 39Jeremy Clyde — the great, great, great-grandson of the 1st Duke of Wellington, Arthur Wellesley.Drew Gardner 11 of 39American suffragette and abolitionist Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Photographed around the time of London’s anti-slavery convention in 1840.The Smithsonian 12 of 39The third great-granddaughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Elizabeth Jenkins-Sahlin.Drew Gardner 13 of 39Robert Falcon Scott, otherwise known as Scott of the Antarctic, photographed by Herbert Ponting in 1912.Wikimedia Commons 14 of 39Robert Falcon Scott’s grandson, Falcon Scott.Drew Gardner 15 of 39Napoleon in His Study, by Jacques-Louis David. 1812.Wikimedia Commons 16 of 39The fourth great-grandson of Napoleon Bonaparte, Hugo de Salis.Drew Gardner 17 of 39Geronimo, “the one who yawns” — who fought against Mexican and U.S. military campaigns in Mexico, New Mexico, and Arizona, in the mid-1800s.Wikimedia Commons 18 of 39Robert Geronimo, descendant of the world-renowned leader of the Bedonkohe tribe of Apaches of the 1800s.Drew Gardner 19 of 39Charles Dickens — author of A Christmas Carol, A Tale of Two Cities, Oliver Twist, and Great Expectations.Public Domain 20 of 39The great, great-grandson of British author Charles Dickens, Gerald Charles Dickens.Drew Gardner 21 of 39Frederick Douglass, the most photographed American of the 19th century, who had to flee the country as a fugitive slave.Public Domain 22 of 39The third great-grandson of Frederick Douglass, Kenneth Morris.Drew Gardner 23 of 39Édouard Manet’s Berthe Morisot with a Bouquet of Violets (in mourning for her father), 1872.Wikimedia Commons 24 of 39Lucie Rouart, the great-granddaughter of Berthe Morisot. Gardner shot this photo in London for an authentic recreation of the painting.Drew Gardner 25 of 39Charles II reigned over England, Scotland, and Ireland and died of an apoplectic fit in 1685 at Whitehall Palace.
He’s seen here painted by Philippe de Champaigne in 1653, while in exile in Normandy as Oliver Cromwell’s forces threatened his position.Wikimedia Commons 26 of 39Lord Charles FitzRoy, the ninth great-grandson of Charles II.Drew Gardner 27 of 39David Livingstone was a Scottish physician, pioneer Christian missionary, and anti-slavery crusader. 1864.Wikimedia Commons 28 of 39Descendant of David Livingstone.Drew Gardner 29 of 39British women’s rights activist and leader of the U.K. suffragette movement, Emmeline Pankhurst. 1906.Ethyl Smith, Female Pipings in Eden, 1934. 30 of 39Helen Pankhurst, great-granddaughter of British suffragette leader Emmeline Pankhurst.Drew Gardner 31 of 39A portrait of Horatio Nelson from 1800 by Friedrich Heinrich Fuger.Royal Naval Museum, Portsmouth, U.K. 32 of 39The fourth great-grandson of Horatio Nelson, William John Raglan Horatio Tribe.Drew Gardner 33 of 39English civil engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, as photographed by Robert Howlett in 1857. Brunel helped usher England into the Industrial age by designing and building railway lines, bridges, tunnels, and docks. National Portrait Gallery 34 of 39Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s third great-grandson, Isambard Thomas.Drew Gardner 35 of 39The most well-known piece of art in the world, the Mona Lisa, depicting Lisa del Giocondo, Leonardo da Vinci. 1503-1506.Wikimedia Commons 36 of 39Irina Guicciardini Strozzi, the 15th great-granddaughter of Mona Lisa subject Lisa del Giocondo.Drew Gardner 37 of 39Portrait of Oliver Cromwell, by Robert Walker, 1654.Robert Walker 38 of 39Oliver Cromwell’s ninth great-grandson, Charles Bush.Drew Gardner 39 of 39Like this gallery?Share it:
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66 Side-By-Side Shots Of Biopic Stars And The Real People They Portrayed
Where Are Their Kids? The Living Descendants Of Famous Historical Figures
44 Colorized Portraits That Reveal Historical Figures As They Truly Were
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1 of 39Clive of India as depicted in Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive, by Nathaniel Dance. 1773.Wikimedia Commons 2 of 39Robert Holden, the fifth great-grandson of Clive of India.Drew Gardner 3 of 39Founding Father and third U.S. President, Thomas Jefferson. He famously raped Sally Hemings, a 14-year-old slave of his, and operated a lucrative nail factory run by child slaves.Wikimedia Commons 4 of 39The sixth great-grandson of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, Shannon LaNier. On his ancestor, Jefferson, LaNier said, “He was a brilliant man who preached equality, but he didn’t practice it. He owned people. And now I’m here because of it.“Drew Gardner 5 of 39English Romantic poet William Wordsworth, who was largely responsible for launching the Romantic Age in English literature. Portrait by William Shuter. 1798.Cornell University 6 of 39The third great-grandson of William Wordsworth, Tom Wontner.Drew Gardner 7 of 39William Wilberforce, a British politician, philanthropist, and abolitionist leader.Wikimedia Commons 8 of 39A descendant of William Wilberforce.Drew Gardner 9 of 39Arthur Wellesley, the 1st Duke of Wellington, as painted by Sir Thomas Lawrence in 1824.U.K. Government Art Collection 10 of 39Jeremy Clyde — the great, great, great-grandson of the 1st Duke of Wellington, Arthur Wellesley.Drew Gardner 11 of 39American suffragette and abolitionist Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Photographed around the time of London’s anti-slavery convention in 1840.The Smithsonian 12 of 39The third great-granddaughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Elizabeth Jenkins-Sahlin.Drew Gardner 13 of 39Robert Falcon Scott, otherwise known as Scott of the Antarctic, photographed by Herbert Ponting in 1912.Wikimedia Commons 14 of 39Robert Falcon Scott’s grandson, Falcon Scott.Drew Gardner 15 of 39Napoleon in His Study, by Jacques-Louis David. 1812.Wikimedia Commons 16 of 39The fourth great-grandson of Napoleon Bonaparte, Hugo de Salis.Drew Gardner 17 of 39Geronimo, “the one who yawns” — who fought against Mexican and U.S. military campaigns in Mexico, New Mexico, and Arizona, in the mid-1800s.Wikimedia Commons 18 of 39Robert Geronimo, descendant of the world-renowned leader of the Bedonkohe tribe of Apaches of the 1800s.Drew Gardner 19 of 39Charles Dickens — author of A Christmas Carol, A Tale of Two Cities, Oliver Twist, and Great Expectations.Public Domain 20 of 39The great, great-grandson of British author Charles Dickens, Gerald Charles Dickens.Drew Gardner 21 of 39Frederick Douglass, the most photographed American of the 19th century, who had to flee the country as a fugitive slave.Public Domain 22 of 39The third great-grandson of Frederick Douglass, Kenneth Morris.Drew Gardner 23 of 39Édouard Manet’s Berthe Morisot with a Bouquet of Violets (in mourning for her father), 1872.Wikimedia Commons 24 of 39Lucie Rouart, the great-granddaughter of Berthe Morisot. Gardner shot this photo in London for an authentic recreation of the painting.Drew Gardner 25 of 39Charles II reigned over England, Scotland, and Ireland and died of an apoplectic fit in 1685 at Whitehall Palace.
He’s seen here painted by Philippe de Champaigne in 1653, while in exile in Normandy as Oliver Cromwell’s forces threatened his position.Wikimedia Commons 26 of 39Lord Charles FitzRoy, the ninth great-grandson of Charles II.Drew Gardner 27 of 39David Livingstone was a Scottish physician, pioneer Christian missionary, and anti-slavery crusader. 1864.Wikimedia Commons 28 of 39Descendant of David Livingstone.Drew Gardner 29 of 39British women’s rights activist and leader of the U.K. suffragette movement, Emmeline Pankhurst. 1906.Ethyl Smith, Female Pipings in Eden, 1934. 30 of 39Helen Pankhurst, great-granddaughter of British suffragette leader Emmeline Pankhurst.Drew Gardner 31 of 39A portrait of Horatio Nelson from 1800 by Friedrich Heinrich Fuger.Royal Naval Museum, Portsmouth, U.K. 32 of 39The fourth great-grandson of Horatio Nelson, William John Raglan Horatio Tribe.Drew Gardner 33 of 39English civil engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, as photographed by Robert Howlett in 1857. Brunel helped usher England into the Industrial age by designing and building railway lines, bridges, tunnels, and docks. National Portrait Gallery 34 of 39Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s third great-grandson, Isambard Thomas.Drew Gardner 35 of 39The most well-known piece of art in the world, the Mona Lisa, depicting Lisa del Giocondo, Leonardo da Vinci. 1503-1506.Wikimedia Commons 36 of 39Irina Guicciardini Strozzi, the 15th great-granddaughter of Mona Lisa subject Lisa del Giocondo.Drew Gardner 37 of 39Portrait of Oliver Cromwell, by Robert Walker, 1654.Robert Walker 38 of 39Oliver Cromwell’s ninth great-grandson, Charles Bush.Drew Gardner 39 of 39Like this gallery?Share it:
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1 of 39Clive of India as depicted in Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive, by Nathaniel Dance. 1773.Wikimedia Commons
2 of 39Robert Holden, the fifth great-grandson of Clive of India.Drew Gardner
3 of 39Founding Father and third U.S. President, Thomas Jefferson. He famously raped Sally Hemings, a 14-year-old slave of his, and operated a lucrative nail factory run by child slaves.Wikimedia Commons
4 of 39The sixth great-grandson of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, Shannon LaNier. On his ancestor, Jefferson, LaNier said, “He was a brilliant man who preached equality, but he didn’t practice it. He owned people. And now I’m here because of it.“Drew Gardner
5 of 39English Romantic poet William Wordsworth, who was largely responsible for launching the Romantic Age in English literature. Portrait by William Shuter. 1798.Cornell University
6 of 39The third great-grandson of William Wordsworth, Tom Wontner.Drew Gardner
7 of 39William Wilberforce, a British politician, philanthropist, and abolitionist leader.Wikimedia Commons
8 of 39A descendant of William Wilberforce.Drew Gardner
9 of 39Arthur Wellesley, the 1st Duke of Wellington, as painted by Sir Thomas Lawrence in 1824.U.K. Government Art Collection
10 of 39Jeremy Clyde — the great, great, great-grandson of the 1st Duke of Wellington, Arthur Wellesley.Drew Gardner
11 of 39American suffragette and abolitionist Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Photographed around the time of London’s anti-slavery convention in 1840.The Smithsonian
12 of 39The third great-granddaughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Elizabeth Jenkins-Sahlin.Drew Gardner
13 of 39Robert Falcon Scott, otherwise known as Scott of the Antarctic, photographed by Herbert Ponting in 1912.Wikimedia Commons
14 of 39Robert Falcon Scott’s grandson, Falcon Scott.Drew Gardner
15 of 39Napoleon in His Study, by Jacques-Louis David. 1812.Wikimedia Commons
16 of 39The fourth great-grandson of Napoleon Bonaparte, Hugo de Salis.Drew Gardner
17 of 39Geronimo, “the one who yawns” — who fought against Mexican and U.S. military campaigns in Mexico, New Mexico, and Arizona, in the mid-1800s.Wikimedia Commons
18 of 39Robert Geronimo, descendant of the world-renowned leader of the Bedonkohe tribe of Apaches of the 1800s.Drew Gardner
19 of 39Charles Dickens — author of A Christmas Carol, A Tale of Two Cities, Oliver Twist, and Great Expectations.Public Domain
20 of 39The great, great-grandson of British author Charles Dickens, Gerald Charles Dickens.Drew Gardner
21 of 39Frederick Douglass, the most photographed American of the 19th century, who had to flee the country as a fugitive slave.Public Domain
22 of 39The third great-grandson of Frederick Douglass, Kenneth Morris.Drew Gardner
23 of 39Édouard Manet’s Berthe Morisot with a Bouquet of Violets (in mourning for her father), 1872.Wikimedia Commons
24 of 39Lucie Rouart, the great-granddaughter of Berthe Morisot. Gardner shot this photo in London for an authentic recreation of the painting.Drew Gardner
25 of 39Charles II reigned over England, Scotland, and Ireland and died of an apoplectic fit in 1685 at Whitehall Palace.
He’s seen here painted by Philippe de Champaigne in 1653, while in exile in Normandy as Oliver Cromwell’s forces threatened his position.Wikimedia Commons
26 of 39Lord Charles FitzRoy, the ninth great-grandson of Charles II.Drew Gardner
27 of 39David Livingstone was a Scottish physician, pioneer Christian missionary, and anti-slavery crusader. 1864.Wikimedia Commons
28 of 39Descendant of David Livingstone.Drew Gardner
29 of 39British women’s rights activist and leader of the U.K. suffragette movement, Emmeline Pankhurst. 1906.Ethyl Smith, Female Pipings in Eden, 1934.
30 of 39Helen Pankhurst, great-granddaughter of British suffragette leader Emmeline Pankhurst.Drew Gardner
31 of 39A portrait of Horatio Nelson from 1800 by Friedrich Heinrich Fuger.Royal Naval Museum, Portsmouth, U.K.
32 of 39The fourth great-grandson of Horatio Nelson, William John Raglan Horatio Tribe.Drew Gardner
33 of 39English civil engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, as photographed by Robert Howlett in 1857. Brunel helped usher England into the Industrial age by designing and building railway lines, bridges, tunnels, and docks. National Portrait Gallery
34 of 39Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s third great-grandson, Isambard Thomas.Drew Gardner
35 of 39The most well-known piece of art in the world, the Mona Lisa, depicting Lisa del Giocondo, Leonardo da Vinci. 1503-1506.Wikimedia Commons
36 of 39Irina Guicciardini Strozzi, the 15th great-granddaughter of Mona Lisa subject Lisa del Giocondo.Drew Gardner
37 of 39Portrait of Oliver Cromwell, by Robert Walker, 1654.Robert Walker
38 of 39Oliver Cromwell’s ninth great-grandson, Charles Bush.Drew Gardner
39 of 39Like this gallery?Share it:
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19 Side-By-Side Portraits Of Famous People From History And Their Modern Descendants View Gallery
19 Side-By-Side Portraits Of Famous People From History And Their Modern Descendants View Gallery
19 Side-By-Side Portraits Of Famous People From History And Their Modern Descendants View Gallery
19 Side-By-Side Portraits Of Famous People From History And Their Modern Descendants View Gallery
19 Side-By-Side Portraits Of Famous People From History And Their Modern Descendants
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Disinterested in the polished narratives of our past, Gardner aimed to wrangle with the sexist and racist realities these mythologized individuals shaped or experienced. Though The Descendants is right in line with the current socio-political climate, Gardner actually began this project 15 years ago.
The effort on display is certainly impressive on its own. Gardner’s hope, however, was to spark curiosity and challenge people to reassess the gray areas of our past — and reassess our history.
“That’s really what I want to talk about,” said Gardner. “Things like that, which show the complexities of history, that talk about race, sexuality, infidelity, all of this. I want it out there, guys. I just think that many of the problems we face, our forebears have faced.”
Origins Of The Descendants
Gardner’s passion for photography began at 14 when his father bought him an SLR. He then used his paper route money to buy a Zenit.
“I was completely hooked,” he confessed.
One of his earliest memories in the field was photographing the lorries dangerously careening through the narrow streets of his hometown in Lincolnshire, England. Initially content to capture anything exciting, he soon realized he “wanted to stand up for what was right.”
This determined outlook landed him his first job at 16, and subsequent work all over Britain for a variety of established publications. He has traveled to more than 50 countries, and document momentous events like the Yugoslav Wars. Nonetheless, his most recent project has been the most rewarding.
“I’ve been shooting The Descendants for 15 years now,” he said. “It is one of my passions, there’s no doubt about it.”
Drew GardnerFrederick Douglass (left), who fled the U.S. as a slave, and his third great-grandson Kenneth Morris (right).
Orchestrating these shoots, however, isn’t easy. Gardner begins by analyzing each component in the original painting or photograph in order to assess whether the object still exists or not. If it does, he and his loyal costumier will rent it.
“Then you get into the freaky stuff,” he said. “There’s a battle going on in the background or an invasion fleet, and you obviously can’t recreate [them]. Sometimes you’re portraying a location which doesn’t exist anymore, or the component in the painting was destroyed by a seething mob.”
In those cases, Gardner and his costumier will digitally replicate the item. Fortunately for them, much of their work regards the 19th century — of which “there is a wealth of props and costume which is very easily available…it’s eminently doable.”
The Aims And Aftermath Of Art
Gardner explained he mainly hoped the project would spark some curiosity, as he himself learned a lot over the course of the shoots. Photographing Thomas Jefferson’s sixth great-grandson Shannon LaNier, for instance, reinforced his belief of how vital it is for people to be aware of their past.
“I’m not saying Thomas Jefferson was the most awful, reprehensible figure,” he said. “What I want to do is I want people to consider, just think about it, he was one of the Founding Fathers and did all this amazing stuff — but also was having sex with a 15-year-old slave girl. It’s really important.”
“Little did I know that the timing of the release would coincide with the biggest civil rights movement since the 1960s,” he told Insider.
Drew GardnerDrew Gardner and Shannon LaNier — the sixth great-grandson of Thomas Jefferson’s child slave Sally Hemings.
It also taught him a lot about women, and why opportunities to use them as subjects for the project were so scarce. “If you were a woman doing notable things, you generally didn’t have children,” said Gardner. “And then if you had children, you really couldn’t do anything else.”
Alongside Shannon LaNier, Gardner’s fondly recalled photographing Charles Bush, the ninth great-grandson of British Civil War leader Oliver Cromwell, Helen Pankhurst — the great-granddaughter of English suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst.
“The Oliver Cromwell one was so out there,” said Gardner. “I liked Emmeline Pankhurst, that was good, because [Helen is] kind of the living embodiment of the Pankhursts. She’s still got very similar beliefs, she’s still outspoken, she still speaks up for women’s rights, and she’s amazing.”
Working with Kenneth Morris, the third great-grandson of Frederick Douglass, reminded Gardner of the privilege many of us have. It didn’t matter that Douglass was one of the greatest orators of his time or the most photographed American of the 19th century — he still fled America a fugitive.
“I want us to look at history and learn from it,” said Gardner. “I’m not saying these people were heroes, these people were saints. I’m not saying that. I’m saying let’s just look at it. Let’s just take an interest in it.”
After exploring Drew Gardner’s Descendants project exploring historical figures in contrast to their modern-day relatives, read about Harriet Tubman’s journey from slave to spy to historical icon. Then, learn about seven horrible acts committed by America’s Founding Fathers.