Julia Margaret Cameron's Working Methods
Exhibition curator Marta Weiss explains Julia Margraet Cameron's unique working methods, and the personal touches in her photographs that make her work so highly regarded today.
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She was using the wet collodion process, and this was a very cumbersome process. The photographs were made onto glass plates. These are large glass plates, all of her prints are contact prints, so whenever you see a Julia Margaret Cameron print, you know that the negative had to be at least as large as the image that you are looking at. So, these are large glass plates, they're fragile and they have to be coated with a number of different substances at different stages in their processing. There are a lot of opportunities to make mistakes, and Cameron was a very exuberant character, and you feel her energy when you look at her photographs. She was so excited about this new way that she was making art, that she was expressing herself artistically. In Cameron's photographs, there are all sorts of things that other photographers would have dismissed as flaws, but what she seemed to embrace. So for example there are smudges, there are even her own fingerprints sometimes on the photographs, embedded into the photographic negative. There are smears, there are swirls, and today, I think those imperfections are very attractive to contemporary audiences, because we can see that these are handmade objects. These aren't the cool, precise results of a machine. And we really get a sense of an individual artist who produced these works of art.