Other Physical Features: The uncropped version of this picture in the
Victoria and Albert collection measures 25.3 x 20.7 cm. (Record
No. 823/42).
Production Description
Production Date: 1865 June
Exhibition History: R.A., 1973;
Pre-Raphaelite Photography,
A British Council Exhibition, 1983;
Dante Gabriel Rossetti Exhibition,
UK90 Festival: Bunkamura Museum of Art, Tokyo, September 22 through November 14, 1990;
Aichi Prefectural Art Gallery, Nagoya, November 21 through December 9, 1990; Ishibashi
Museum of Art, Ishibashi Foundation, Kurume, January 6 through February 11, 1991
Provenance
Current Location: Victoria and Albert Museum
Catalog Number: 823,42
Note: The Birmingham City Museum and Art Gallery has
a
print of the photograph (19.4 x 14.6 cm) that is cropped down, as is the
second copy in the V & A..
This picture is one of the most remarkable in the series, especially the two prints
that are preserved in the Victoria and Albert album. Mrs. Morris is
posed outdoors against the backdrop of a billowing canopy, with her hands clasped at
her midriff. She is turned facing the camera, though she looks away to the right.
The other V & A print is cropped down from the original negative, as is the Birmingham copy. This modern print shows the composition
of the original negative and is far the more dramatic
and dynamic image, though the cropped version is also interesting and effective, not least
because of certain ghostly internal “framing” effects (these appear
on several other of the pictures in the series). The Birmingham print, which
is a replica of the cropped version, does not display this framing effect.
This pose is very close in style to
another pose also composed outdoors in the
marquee.
Bibliography
Bartram,
Pre-Raphaelite
Photography
,
38-40.
Bartram,
The
Pre-Raphaelite Camera
, Chapter 6.
DGR 1828-1882: An Exhibition [Tokyo 1990],
187 (no. 153).
Scholarly Commentary
Introduction
As with a number of photographs in the Jane Morris series, at least three copies of this pose survive, one print in the Birmingham City Museum and Art Gallery, this copy (which is a print done around 1930), and another also in the Victoria and Albert Museum's Album of Portraits of Mrs. William Morris (Jane Burden). Posed by Rossetti, 1865 .
This picture is one of the most remarkable in the series, especially the two prints that are preserved in the Victoria and Albert album. Mrs. Morris is posed outdoors against the backdrop of a billowing canopy, with her hands clasped at her midriff. She is turned facing the camera, though she looks away to the right. The other V & A print is cropped down from the original negative, as is the Birmingham copy. This modern print shows the composition of the original negative and is far the more dramatic and dynamic image, though the cropped version is also interesting and effective, not least because of certain ghostly internal “framing” effects (these appear on several other of the pictures in the series). The Birmingham print, which is a replica of the cropped version, does not display this framing effect.
This pose is very close in style to another pose also composed outdoors in the marquee.
Bibliography