Beatrice
Photograph
1866 (photographed)
1866 (photographed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
A photograph of a woman (May Prinsep) shown from the shoulders as a 3/4 profile. Her hair is loose and the top of her head is covered by a large turban. The photograph is mounted on a folded paper mount with three other photographs, each mounted on one of the four sides of the mount.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Beatrice (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | Albumen print from wet collodion glass negative |
Brief description | Photograph by Julia Margaret Cameron, 'Beatrice' (sitter May Prinsep), albumen print, 1866 |
Physical description | A photograph of a woman (May Prinsep) shown from the shoulders as a 3/4 profile. Her hair is loose and the top of her head is covered by a large turban. The photograph is mounted on a folded paper mount with three other photographs, each mounted on one of the four sides of the mount. |
Dimensions |
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Content description | The true story of the Cenci, which took place in sixteenth-century Italy, inspired Shelley's poetic drama, 'The Cenci', published in 1819. The debauched Count Cenci conceived an incestuous passion for his daughter Beatrice. The young woman devised, with her step-mother and brother, a desperate plan - hiring assassins to murder the Count. Despite the justice of their cause, Beatrice and her helpers are arrested, admit their guilt, and are sentenced to death by the Pope. The simple title invites this dramatic reading of the life-size, close-up head. |
Style | |
Credit line | The Royal Photographic Society Collection at the V&A, acquired with the generous assistance of the National Lottery Heritage Fund and Art Fund. |
Object history | Julia Margaret Cameron (1815–79) was one of the most important and innovative photographers of the 19th century. Her photographs were rule-breaking: purposely out of focus, and often including scratches, smudges and other traces of the artist’s process. Best known for her powerful portraits, she also posed her sitters – friends, family and servants – as characters from biblical, historical or allegorical stories. Born in Calcutta on 11 June 1815, the fourth of seven sisters, her father was an East India Company official and her mother descended from French aristocracy. Educated mainly in France, Cameron returned to India in 1834. In 1842, the British astronomer Sir John Herschel (1792 – 1871) introduced Cameron to photography, sending her examples of the new invention. They had met in 1836 while Cameron was convalescing from an illness in the Cape of Good Hope, South Africa. He remained a life-long friend and correspondent on technical photographic matters. That same year she met Charles Hay Cameron (1795–1880), 20 years her senior, a reformer of Indian law and education. They married in Calcutta in 1838 and she became a prominent hostess in colonial society. A decade later, the Camerons moved to England. By then they had four children; two more were born in England. Several of Cameron’s sisters were already living there, and had established literary, artistic and social connections. The Camerons eventually settled in Freshwater, on the Isle of Wight. At the age of 48 Cameron received a camera as a gift from her daughter and son-in-law. It was accompanied by the words, ‘It may amuse you, Mother, to try to photograph during your solitude at Freshwater.’ Cameron had compiled albums and even printed photographs before, but her work as a photographer now began in earnest. The Camerons lived at Freshwater until 1875, when they moved to Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) where Charles Cameron had purchased coffee and rubber plantations, managed under difficult agricultural and financial conditions by three of their sons. Cameron continued her photographic practice at her new home yet her output decreased significantly and only a small body of photographs from this time remains. After moving to Ceylon the Camerons made only one more visit to England in May 1878. Julia Margaret Cameron died after a brief illness in Ceylon in 1879. Cameron’s relationship with the Victoria and Albert Museum dates to the earliest years of her photographic career. The first museum exhibition of Cameron's work was held in 1865 at the South Kensington Museum, London (now the V&A). The South Kensington Museum was not only the sole museum to exhibit Cameron’s work in her lifetime, but also the institution that collected her photographs most extensively in her day. In 1868 the Museum gave Cameron the use of two rooms as a portrait studio, perhaps qualifying her as its first artist-in-residence. Today the V&A’s Cameron collection includes photographs acquired directly from the artist, collected later from various sources and letters from Cameron to Sir Henry Cole (1808–82), the Museum’s founding director and an early supporter of photography. This photograph is part of the Royal Photographic Society Collection at the V&A which also includes fragments of Cameron's original autobiographical manuscript for Annals of My Glass House. |
Subjects depicted | |
Literary reference | Shelley, Percy Bysshe , 'The Cenci' (1819) |
Associated objects |
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Bibliographic reference | Cox, Julian and Colin Ford, with contributions by Joanne Lukitsh and Philippa Wright. Julia Margaret Cameron: The Complete Photographs. London: Thames & Hudson, in association with The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles and The National Museum of Photography, Film & Television, Bradford, 2003. ISBN: 0-500-54265-1
Cat. no. 406, p. 244 |
Other numbers |
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Collection | |
Accession number | RPS.1086:2-2017 |
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Record created | November 10, 2017 |
Record URL |
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