Image for Julia Margaret Cameron's Women

Julia Margaret Cameron's Women

See all formats and editions

Julia Margaret Cameron was a pioneer of photography and one of the great portrait photographers of all time.

She photographed many of the major figures of the nineteenth century, including Tennyson, Darwin, Robert Browning, and Longfellow.

The bulk of her work, however, consists of portraits of women.

This stunning book is the first to concentrate on this central aspect of Cameron's work, providing new information and insights about one of photography's most visionary practitioners.

Using dramatic lighting and a soft-focus lens, Cameron made mesmerizing psychological portraits that exhibit an intensity of emotion not often publicly revealed in Victorian society.

Her portraits of women are variously defiant, forthright, melancholy, or languidly sensual, offering, when seen together, an unexpectedly complex view of the photographer and her time.

The superb photographs, reproduced here in color and duotone, are complemented by an engrossing text.

There are three essays: one by Sylvia Wolf on the artist and her work; another on the literary culture of Cameron's time by Phyllis Rose; and a third on Cameron's photographic illustrations of Tennyson's epic poem Idylls of the King by Debra N.

Mancoff. The book also includes biographies of Cameron's female sitters by Stephanie Lipscomb, a short essay on the sale of Cameron's work, and an appendix on Cameron's mythological and literary subjects their significance to the Victorians.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Yale University Press
0300077815 / 9780300077810
Hardback
770.92
09/10/1998
United Kingdom
English
216p. : ill. (some col.)
31 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More