Julia Margaret Cameron1867, April
Sir John Herschel
Albumen silver print, from glass negative35.9 x 27.9 cm (14 1/8 x 11 in.)
Metropolitan Museum of ArtThe Rubel Collection, Partial and Promised Gift of William Rubel, 2013, Accession Number: 2013.1116
Curatorial description (Accessed: 21 Sept 2017)
No commercial portrait photographer of the period would have portrayed Herschel as Cameron did here, devoid of classical columns, weighty tomes, scientific attributes, and academic posesthe standard vehicles for conveying the high stature and classical learning that one's sitter possessed (or pretended to possess). To Cameron, Herschel was more than a renowned scientist; he was as a Teacher and High Priest, an illustrious and revered as well as beloved friend whom she had known for thirty years. Naturally, her image of him would not be a stiff, formal effigy. Instead, she had him wash and tousle his hair to catch the light, draped him in black, brought her camera close to his face, and photographed him emerging from the darkness like a vision of an Old Testament prophet.
LL/77590