In December 1864 Daniel, his wife Grace, their children Isabella, John and James, and Grace's younger sister Margaret departed
Gravesend in the immigrant ship
Flying Cloud. They arrived in
Moreton Bay in March 1865 and settled in Brisbane. In March 1867 he bought a block of land of at Lower River Terrace,
South Brisbane, where a house was built for the family.
Portraits The main business of the studio was
portraiture, mostly in the
carte-de-visite format. In the glass-roofed operating room behind the building Daniel Marquis made lifelike images of the colonists. He posed his sitters with backdrops, furniture, drapery, head clamps and other accoutrements chosen to present them as handsome and respectable. Most of the studio's clients were middle-class colonists—townspeople from Brisbane and
squatters and their families from outlying districts. In 1868 Daniel was appointed as photographer by
Governor Samuel Blackall, a mark of social and professional approval. Through them and other collectors the photographs were acquired by European ethnographic museums including the
Pitt Rivers Museum at
Oxford University, the Russian
Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography in
Saint Petersburg, and the
Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge.
Views at
Indooroopilly, which carried the railway line across the
Brisbane River, captured by Daniel Marquis, c.1876. This is an albumen contact print from a 12 x 10 inch plate. Daniel Marquis offered “views of gentlemen’s residences taken to order” and “
stereoscopic and other views of Brisbane and neighbourhood.” He captured many views of places in Brisbane, initially on 8½ x 6½ inch plates (whole-plate size) and, from the mid-1870s, on 12 x 10 inch plates. His customers had the albumen prints framed for display, or collected them in albums, such as one presented to
Prince Alfred after his visit to Queensland in 1868. Daniel made a series of multi-plate panoramas from
Wickham Terrace and Bowen Terrace that recorded changes in the Brisbane townscape through the 1870s. == Death and legacy ==