LONDON.- To mark the bicentenary of the birth of Julia Margaret Cameron (1815-1879), one of the most important and innovative photographers of the 19th century, the
V&A is showcasing more than 100 of her photographs from the Museums collection. The exhibition offers a retrospective of Camerons work and examines her relationship with the V&As founding director, Sir Henry Cole, who in 1865 presented her first museum exhibition and the only one during her lifetime.
Cameron is one of the most celebrated women in the history of photography. She began her photographic career when she received her first camera as a gift from her daughter at the age of 48, and quickly and energetically devoted herself to the art of photography. Within two years she had sold and given her photographs to the South Kensington Museum (now the V&A) and in 1868, the Museum granted her the use of two rooms as a portrait studio, likely making her the Museums first artist-in-residence.
150 years after first exhibiting her work, the V&A presents highlights of Camerons output, including original prints acquired directly from the artist and a selection of her letters to Henry Cole. Coles 1865 diary, in which he records going to Mrs Camerons
to have my portrait photographed in her style is on view, along with the only surviving Cameron portrait of Cole. The exhibition also includes the first photograph to be identified of Camerons studio. Entitled Idylls of the Village, or Idols of the Village, it was made in about 1863 by Oscar Gustaf Rejlander, possibly in collaboration with Cameron, and depicts two women drawing water from a well in front of the glazed fowl-house Cameron turned into her studio. The print has been newly identified and has never before been exhibited.
Best known for her powerful portraits, Cameron also posed her sitters friends, family and servants as characters from biblical, historical or allegorical stories. The exhibition features a variety of photographic subjects, which Cameron described as Portraits, Madonna groups, and Fancy Subjects for Pictorial Effect. These range from Annie, a close-up of a childs face that Cameron called her first success, to striking portraits of members of Camerons intellectual and artistic circle such as poet laureate Alfred Lord Tennyson, scientist Charles Darwin and Julia Jackson, Camerons niece and mother of Virginia Woolf. Also on display are Renaissance-inspired religious arrangements and illustrations to Tennysons epic Arthurian poem, Idylls of the King.
Julia Margaret Cameron is structured around four letters from Cameron to Cole, each demonstrating a different aspect of her development as an artist: her early ambition; her growing artistic confidence and innovation; her concerns as a portraitist and desire to earn money from photography; and her struggles with technical aspects of photography. This final section offers insight into Camerons working methods an arduous process which involved handling potentially hazardous chemicals. It includes a group of her most experimental photographs, recently discovered to have once belonged to her friend and artistic advisor, the painter and sculptor G.F. Watts. Camerons photographs were highly innovative: intentionally out-of-focus, and often including scratches, smudges and other traces of her process. In her lifetime, Cameron was criticised for her unconventional techniques, but also appreciated for the beauty of her compositions and her conviction that photography was an art form.
The exhibition is part of a nationwide celebration of Julia Margaret Camerons work during her bicentenary year, including the exhibition Julia Margaret Cameron: Influence and Intimacy at the Science Museums Media Space, which displays prints given by Cameron to the astronomer Sir John Herschel, and a series of exhibitions and events at Camerons former home, Dimbola Museum and Galleries, on the Isle of Wight.