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A Royal Passion: Queen Victoria and Photography

  • Anne M. Lyden
    With contributions by Sophie Gordon and Jennifer Green-Lewis

    In January 1839, photography was announced to the world. Two years prior, a young Queen Victoria ascended to the throne of Great Britain and Ireland. These two events, while seemingly unrelated, marked the beginnings of a relationship that continued throughout the nineteenth century and helped construct the image of an entire age.

    A Royal Passion explores the connections between photography and the monarchy through Victoria’s embrace of the new medium and her portrayal through the lens. Together with Prince Albert, her beloved husband, the Queen amassed one of the earliest collections of photographs, including works by renowned photographers such as Roger Fenton, Gustave Le Gray, and Julia Margaret Cameron. Victoria was also the first British monarch to have her life recorded by the camera: images of her as wife, mother, widow, and empress proliferated around the world at a time when the British Empire spanned the globe.

    The featured essays consider Victoria’s role in shaping the history of photography as well as photography’s role in shaping the image of the Queen. Including more than 150 color images—several rarely seen before—drawn from the Royal Collection and the J. Paul Getty Museum, this volume accompanies an exhibition of the same name, on view at the J. Paul Getty Museum from February 4 to June 20, 2014.

    Anne M. Lyden is international photography curator at the National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh, and former associate curator in the Department of Photographs at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles. She is curator of the exhibition A Royal Passion: Queen Victoria and Photography and has written about nineteenth-century photography, including The Photographs of Frederick Evans (Getty Publications, 2010) and Railroad Vision: Photography, Travel, and Perception(Getty Publications, 2003). Sophie Gordon is senior curator of photographs at the Royal Collection, Windsor. Jennifer Green-Lewis is associate professor of English literature at George Washington University, Washington, D.C.

    “This is a volume to pore over. . . . It will remain a valuable resource for scholars. Equally, however, non-specialists will relish the access to photographs from the Queen's private collection.”
    History of Photography

    “Highly recommended for Anglophiles, as well as art and photo historians.”
    —Library Journal

    “The essays are fascinating. . . . Browsing through the plates in this book is . . . a feast for the eyes.”
    —Edinburgh Book Review

    “Perceptive and handsomely produced.”
    Victorian Studies

    232 pages
    
9 1/2 x 11 1/2 inches
    
120 color and 43 b/w illustrations
    
ISBN 978-1-60606-155-8
    
hardcover

    Getty Publications
    Imprint: J. Paul Getty Museum

    2014

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