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Portico de la Gloria
Cowper, Isabel Agnes, born 1826 - died 1911 - Enlarge image
Portico de la Gloria; Tympanum. Central Doorway
- Object:
Photograph
- Place of origin:
South Kensington Museum (This is one of three plates by Cowper which were photographed from the casts installed in the South Kensington Museum. The other 17 plates in the volume were photographed by Charles Thurston Thompson at the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostella in Spain., photographed)
- Date:
1868 (photographed)
- Artist/Maker:
Cowper, Isabel Agnes, born 1826 - died 1911 (photographer)
- Materials and Techniques:
Albumen print
- Museum number:
3453-1932
- Gallery location:
Prints & Drawings Study Room, room 512M, case MX5, shelf XM, box 76
In September 1865, John Charles Robinson, curator at the South Kensington Museum (which was to become the V&A), travelled to Santiago de Compostela as part of an expedition to acquire Spanish artworks for the Museum's collection. Impressed by the Portico de la Gloria at Santiago, he determined that the Portico should be reproduced and recorded in order to be displayed at the South Kensington Museum. To this end, in 1866, Robinson sent Museum photographer Charles Thurston Thompson (1816-1868) to photograph the cathedral and Domenico Bucciani, London's leading producer of plaster casts, to produce the casts which later took pride of place in the new cast court when it completed in 1873.
Thompson returned with 86 views of the cathedral. From these, under the aegis of Department of Science and Art, The Arundel Society issued a volume of 20 photographs of Santiago attributed to Thompson. Published in the later half of 1868, Thompson never got to see the spendid volume as he died in January of that same year. Curiously, in the table of contents, there is a note concerning three of the views: 'From their position in the portico, the Archivolt and Tympanum of the Central Doorway could not be satisfactorily photographed; Nos. 12, 13, and 14 were therefore taken from the Casts in the South Kensington Museum'. It has now been determined that these three views, of which this photograph is one, were taken by Thompson's successor, Isabel Agnes Cowper (1826? - 1911).
Cowper was the sister of Thompson, 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. This image with the fragments of the sign written in English and of the museum window, provide a context that is lacking in Thompson's views. Such a context points to the role of the Museum in the early 19th-century.