The Rosebud Garden of Girls

nationality
British
birth-death
1815-1879
Nationality
English
Creation date
Collection
Prints
Materials
albumen print
Dimensions
12 1/16 x 10 5/8 in. (image)
Not Currently On View
Credit line
Allen Whitehill Clowes Fund
Accession number
1993.16
Provenance
(Lee Marks Fine Art, Shelbyville, Indiana); purchased by the Indianapolis Museum of Art in 1993 (1993.16).
Indianapolis Museum of Art: Highlights of the Collection (2005)

In the garden of the English poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson, four sisters posed for Tennyson's neighbor and friend Julia Margaret Cameron. This was no family snapshot, no captured moment of reality-the purpose for which William Henry Fox Talbot had invented his photographic process in 1839. Cameron meticulously orchestrated a tableau, personifying a verse in Tennyson's "Come into the Garden, Maud," where flowers, "in gloss of satin and glimmer of pearls," are "sunning over with curls" in a "rosebud garden of girls."

Cameron was forty-eight when her daughter gave her a camera in the hopes that it would "amuse" her, and with the assumption that she would join the legion of amateurs who were exploiting the increasingly easy and reliable picture-making possibilities of photography. Instead, Cameron embraced photography with a passionate zeal, challenging the highbrow position that photography was too scientific and too mechanical to be a fine art. By softening the focus, managing the light, and costuming her sitters in homage to her literary sources, Cameron dissolved the boundary between fact-the province of the photographer-and fiction-the realm of the creative artist. She aimed to achieve the same ethereal ideal of beauty that inspired the Victorian poets and the Pre-Raphaelite painters with whom she was closely connected.

My aspirations are to ennoble Photography and to secure for it the character and uses of high Art.
-Julia Margaret Cameron, 1864
Reproduction of these images, including downloading, is prohibited without written authorization from VAGA.

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