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BIOGRAPHIES
CAMERON, JULIA MARGARET
India, 1815-1878
Cameron was born in Calcutta in 1815. Although educated in France
she moved back to India in 1834 when she was nineteen. In 1848 she
and her husband moved to England. Cameron was part of a large family,
the fourth of ten children, and had a large family of her own. Part
of the upper class, Cameron enjoyed a rich life and made the acquaintence
of a number of famous people. Her career as a photographer began
in 1863 when her husband was away on a trip. To cheer her from her
loneliness, her daughter gave her a camera.
Cameron liked the soft focus portraits and the streak marks on
her negatives, choosing to work with these irregularites, making
them part of her pictures. Although her photographs lacked the sharpness
that other photographers at the time aspired towards, they succeeded
in conveying the emotional and spiritual aura of the sitter. Cameron's
ambition as a photographer was to "secure [for photography]
the character and uses of high art by combining real and ideal,
and sacrificing nothing of truth by all possible devotion to poetry
and beauty."
In 1873 Cameron sent her sister Maria (Mia) Jackson a partially
empty photo album, asking her sister to collaborate with her on
the project in the years to come by adding images, as she sent them,
in the places and the sequence she described. The front part of
the album had photographs and portraits Cameron took of her family
and friends, both candidly posed as well as acting out staged tableaux.
The back half of the album contained images by Cameron's contemporaries
like Oscar Gustave Rejlander and Lewis Caroll, as well as numerous
photographs of paintings and drawings
The Mia Album contained both kinds of images. Amongst the photographs
in the album and in the exhibition are some of Cameron's most famous.
Included is The Kiss of Peace, a portrait of a mother and child
based on the gospel story of the Visitation. In the photograph the
child gazes down, while the mother's lips rest casually on her brow.
This is a quiet image, one that projects maternal love. Most of
Cameron's photographs have a spiritual sensibility, and are peaceful
and romantic. The mood is sombre and contemplative. She did not
photograph action or care much about backgrounds. It was the essence
of the subject that motivated Cameron's photography.
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