Please complete the form to email this item.

Photograph - Study of Prospero
  • Study of Prospero
    Julia Margaret Cameron, born 1815 - died 1879
  • Enlarge image

Study of Prospero

  • Object:

    Photograph

  • Place of origin:

    Isle of Wight, England (photographed)

  • Date:

    May 1865 (photographed)

  • Artist/Maker:

    Julia Margaret Cameron, born 1815 - died 1879 (photographer)

  • Materials and Techniques:

    Albumen print from wet collodion glass negative

  • Credit Line:

    Gift of the artist, 1865

  • Museum number:

    44:958

  • Gallery location:

    Prints & Drawings Study Room, level H, case X, shelf 311, box D

  • Download image

Julia Margaret Cameron's career as a photographer began in 1863 when her daughter gave her a camera. Cameron began photographing everyone in sight. Because of the newness of photography as a practice, she was free to make her own rules and not be bound to convention. The kinds of images being made at the time did not interest Cameron. She was interested in capturing another kind of photographic truth. Not one dependent on accuracy of sharp detail, but one that depicted the emotional state of her sitter.

Cameron liked the soft focus portraits and the streak marks on her negatives, choosing to work with these irregularities, making them part of her pictures. Although at the time Cameron was seen as an unconventional and experimental photographer, her images have a solid place in the history of photography.

Most of Cameron's photographs are portraits. She used members of her family as sitters and made photographs than concentrated on their faces. She was interested in conveying their natural beauty, often asking female sitters to let down their hair so as to show them in a way that they were not accustomed to presenting themselves. In addition to making stunning and evocative portraits both of male and female subjects, Cameron also staged tableaux and posed her sitters in situations that simulated allegorical paintings.

Sir Henry Taylor was a poet and civil servant. His literary achievements were greatly admired in the mid-Victorian period. He was one of Julia Margaret Cameron's closest friends and her most photographed male subject.

Physical description

Portrait of a man (Henry Taylor) with long white beard wearing a hat, looking at his left.

Place of Origin

Isle of Wight, England (photographed)

Date

May 1865 (photographed)

Artist/maker

Julia Margaret Cameron, born 1815 - died 1879 (photographer)

Materials and Techniques

Albumen print from wet collodion glass negative

Marks and inscriptions

Taylor, Sir Henry (1800-1886)
Portraits.
X.311 44958 Photographs by Mrs. Julia Margaret Cameron, c. 1864-75. Sir Henry Taylor.

Dimensions

Height: 29.5 cm image, Width: 25.5 cm image, Height: 39.8 cm mount, Width: 30 cm mount

Object history note

Gift of the artist, 28 & 31 July 1865

Descriptive line

Photograph by Julia Margaret Cameron, 'Study of Prospero' (sitter Sir Henry Taylor), albumen print, 1865

Bibliographic References (Citation, Note/Abstract, NAL no)

Julian Cox and Colin Ford, et al. Julia Margaret Cameron: the complete photographs. London : Thames and Hudson, 2003. Cat. no. 780, p. 350.

Materials

Photographic paper

Techniques

Albumen process

Subjects depicted

Taylor, Henry; Prospero

Categories

Portraits; Photographs

Collection code

PDP

Download image
Qr_O129874
Ajax-loader