Luminous-Lint - for collectors and connoisseurs of fine photography
HOME  BACK>>> Subscriptions <<< | Testimonials | Login |

HomeContentsVisual indexesJulia Margaret Cameron

 
  
Standard
  
  
Julia Margaret Cameron 
Christabel 
1866 
  
Albumen silver print, from glass negative 
33.2 x 26.9 cm (13 1/16 x 10 9/16 ins ) 
  
Metropolitan Museum of Art 
Harris Brisbane Dick Fund, 1941, Accession Number: 41.21.26 
  
 
LL/67658 
  
Curatorial description (18 June 2016)
 
"Yea, she doth smile, and she doth weep,
Like a youthful hermitess,
Beauteous in a wilderness."
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
 
Coleridge's unfinished poem "Christabel" (1816) tells the story of a young woman debased by sorcery. A dark poem, full of rolling fog and lesbian innuendo, "Christabel" was the kind of tale that appealed to the Victorian palate--a soup of sexual transgression and moral repair. Cameron rarely made portraits of women; rather, when she photographed them, they appeared as representations of some biblical, mythological, or literary figure. Cameron's niece, May Prinsep, who would later marry Hallam Tennyson, son of the poet laureate, appears here as the ethereal Christabel before her corruption. Cameron's long exposure time and distinct soft-focus technique lend the work its idealizing gravitas even while, paradoxically, intensifying the realistic presence of the individual before the lens. For all her "high art" aspirations, Cameron was always quick to note that her images were "from life." 
 

 
  
 
  
HOME  BACK>>> Subscriptions <<< | Testimonials | Login |
 Facebook LuminousLint 
 Twitter @LuminousLint