Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level F , Case X, Shelf 601, Box B

South Kensington Museum, Terracotta decoration and columns of the Lecture Theatre facade, designed by Godfrey Sykes and made by Blanchard & Co., ca. 1865

Photograph
ca. 1875 (photographed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Photographs and photographers were present from the very beginning of the V&A's history and the Museum has an extensive collection of images from the 1850s through to the present which documents the construction and development of the V&A and the South Kensington site.

Originally collected by the National Art Library as part of a programme to record works of art, architecture and design in the interest of public education, these topographic and architectural views were valued as records and as source material for students of architecture and design. As well as being crucial records of the history of the V&A, and an important element within the National Art Library's visual encyclopaedia, these photographs are also significant artefacts in the history of the art of photography.

Isabel Cowper was the sister of the South Kensington Museum's first official photographer, Charles Thurston Thompson (1816-1868) and of the Superintendent of the Museum, Richard A. Thompson. Little is known about Cowper, but in her letter of resignation in 1891, she refers to herself as the Museum's 'Official Photographer', having taken up the position after the death of her brother. As such, she is an important part of the early history of V&A and a seminal figure behind the Museum’s early uptake of photography to document the arts.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleSouth Kensington Museum, Terracotta decoration and columns of the Lecture Theatre facade, designed by Godfrey Sykes and made by Blanchard & Co., ca. 1865 (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Albumen print
Brief description
Photograph, Isabel Agnes Cowper, South Kensington Museum, Terracotta decoration and columns of the Lecture Theatre facade, designed by Godfrey Sykes and made by Blanchard & Co., about 1865, albumen print, about 1875
Physical description
A photograph of a intricately carved columns supporting arches which appears to be on an upper floor of a building.
Dimensions
  • Image height: 21.6cm
  • Image width: 15.4cm
  • Mount height: 33.1cm
  • Mount width: 23.5cm
Style
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'I A C' (photographers initials, pencil, lower right mount)
  • 'England / London: South Kensington / Victoria & Albert / Column in front of Lecture Theatre, South Kensington Museum. Designed by / Godfrey Sykes' (mount)
  • 'A.b. London' (department classification label, upper right mount)
  • library stamp (blindstamp, upper centre mount)
Subjects depicted
Place depicted
Association
Summary
Photographs and photographers were present from the very beginning of the V&A's history and the Museum has an extensive collection of images from the 1850s through to the present which documents the construction and development of the V&A and the South Kensington site.

Originally collected by the National Art Library as part of a programme to record works of art, architecture and design in the interest of public education, these topographic and architectural views were valued as records and as source material for students of architecture and design. As well as being crucial records of the history of the V&A, and an important element within the National Art Library's visual encyclopaedia, these photographs are also significant artefacts in the history of the art of photography.

Isabel Cowper was the sister of the South Kensington Museum's first official photographer, Charles Thurston Thompson (1816-1868) and of the Superintendent of the Museum, Richard A. Thompson. Little is known about Cowper, but in her letter of resignation in 1891, she refers to herself as the Museum's 'Official Photographer', having taken up the position after the death of her brother. As such, she is an important part of the early history of V&A and a seminal figure behind the Museum’s early uptake of photography to document the arts.
Other number
10211 (MA/32/30), F529 (MA/32/272) - Negative number (V&A Archive Guard Book reference)
Collection
Accession number
76531

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Record createdJuly 1, 2009
Record URL
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