Edwin Land, the president and co-founder of the Polaroid Corporation, demonstrates his company’s “60-second film” in 1963. By allowing photographers to see (almost) immediately what they had shot, Polaroid revolutionized photography and foreshadowed, in a way, the advent of digital photography and its unspoken creed of instant gratification. This Fritz Goro picture, meanwhile, with its contrasting shapes set off against vibrant colors and the earthier tones of Land’s suit and camera, has an early-1960s feel that Mad Men’s producers would drool over.