Julia Margaret Cameron (British born India, 1815-1879)
Call I Follow, I Follow, Let Me Die
1867
Carbon print
35.1cm x 26.7cm
© The Royal Photographic Society Collection at the V&A, acquired with the generous assistance of the National Lottery Heritage Fund and Art Fund
Call I Follow, I Follow, Let Me Die
1867
Carbon print
35.1cm x 26.7cm
© The Royal Photographic Society Collection at the V&A, acquired with the generous assistance of the National Lottery Heritage Fund and Art Fund
“I longed to arrest all beauty that came before me, and at length the longing has been satisfied.” — Julia Margaret Cameron
The following text is from The Morgan Library & Museum website:
Arresting Beauty: Julia Margaret Cameron explores the path-breaking career of photography's first widely recognized artist. Cameron (1815-1879) was born in Calcutta modern day Kolkata to a French mother and English father, in 1848; with her husband and children, she moved to England where her sisters introduced her to the elite cultural circles in which they traveled. Residing on the Isle of Wight, where she was close neighbors with the poet Alfred Tennyson, Cameron acquired her first camera at age 48. In only eleven years she would create thousands of exposures and leave an enduring image of the Victorian era as an age of intellectual and spiritual ambition.
Cameron's prodigious drive helped her become a probing portraitist of leading writers, artists, and scientists, such as Tennyson, Thomas Carlyle, G.F. Watts, and Charles Darwin, while her absorption with fine art, notably Renaissance painting, led her to create staged tableaux in a model that has been perpetually rediscovered by photographers down to the present. Most distinct of all was Cameron's wholly personal handling of her medium. Heedless of contemporary conventions of technique, alert to the happy effects of accident and indifferent to critical scorn, she embraced a style of spontaneous intimacy, that distanced her from the photographic establishment of her time and class. Motion blur, highly selective faces, and even fingerprints on the glass negatives (which required developing before their emulsions dried) are among the idiosyncrasies of her singular oeuvre.
Cameron was quick to exploit publishing and promotional opportunities: at London's South Kensington Museum (today the Victoria & Albert Museum) she secured not only an exhibition in 1865 but, a few years later, studio space, and she was the first photographic artist to be collected by the institution. Arresting Beauty features prints from its initial purchase, and from subsequent additions to its holdings, which have grown to number nearly one thousand. The exhibition includes Cameron's large camera lens (all that survives of her apparatus), pages from her unfinished memoir in manuscript, Annals of My Glass House, and portraits she made in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) after Cameron and her husband moved there in 1875.
Arresting Beauty: Julia Margaret Cameron was created by the V&A - Touring the World
Arresting Beauty Exhibition Morgan Library and Museum exhibition link
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