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Title:
Portrait of Robert Howlett
Object name(s):
Photograph
Brief description:
Portrait of the photographer Robert Howlett in a seated position.
Collection:
Victoria and Albert Museum
Associated concept:
Photographs
Content - description:
From the mid 1850s Turner built a studio – a ‘glass house’ above his London business premises – and a darkroom. He made many portraits here, very likely including this one, although he seems never to have exhibited them. His subjects were his family and household members, business associates and fellow photographers. For portraits, Turner often used glass rather than paper negatives which had short exposure times and rendered a high level of detail. The subject is Robert Howlett (1831-1858) whose best-known work is the series on the Great Eastern (1857), which includes the iconic portrait of Isambard Kingdom Brunel, of which one of the finest prints is in the V&A collection. Howlett’s obituary suggested that he might have inadvertently poisoned himself with his own photographic chemicals: this was not at all uncommon. This image must have been made shortly before his death.
Credit line:
Purchased through the Cecil Beaton Royalties Fund
Current reproduction location:
https://framemark.vam.ac.uk/collections/2009BY6477/full/!100,100/0/default.jpg
Location type:
Thumbnail
Dimension:
Height
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
19.2
Dimension:
Length
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
14.3
Material:
photographic paper
Object name:
Photograph
Object number:
E.2-2009
Object production date:
1850s
Date - association:
made
Date - earliest / single:
1850-01-01
Date - latest:
1859-12-31
Object production person:
Turner, Benjamin Brecknell
Person's association:
maker
Object production place:
UK
Place association:
made
Physical description:
Portrait of the photographer Robert Howlett in a seated position.
Reproduction number:
2009BY6477
Reproduction number:
2019MJ9223
Responsible department/section:
PDP
Technique:
albumen process
Technique:
calotype
Technique:
Albumen print from a calotype negative
Text reason:
Collections online record
Text:
Benjamin Brecknell Turner (1815-1894) was one of the first, and remains one of the greatest, British photographers. He began practising photography in 1849 according to the ‘calotype’ technique patented in 1841 by the British inventor of photography W. H. Fox Talbot (1800-1877), taking out a license directly from him. Turner exhibited at the world’s first public photographic exhibition, held at London’s Society of Arts in 1852, where he was singled out by a reviewer from the Times as one of the best contributors. In 1855 he won a medal at the Paris Exhibition Universelle and continued exhibiting his photographs in photographic society exhibitions across Britain until the 1880s. Turner is best known for his bold and large-scale (30 x 40 cm) albumen prints from calotype negatives showing rural English scenes in the picturesque tradition: ruined abbeys, castles, farmhouses and the rural landscape. However, he also made accomplished portraits of family, friends, and fellow photographers, and for these he often used the newer wet collodion on glass process. Turner earned his living from running a successful tallow chandler’s business in the Haymarket, London, making candles and saddle soap. Rather than the professional photographers, it was the Gentleman-amateurs like Turner who contributed the most significantly to the rapid technical and aesthetic development of the medium that occurred in the 1850s. They furthered discussion through meetings and journals, exchanged experimental and technical findings and photographic prints and exhibited in a network of clubs and societies devoted to the art of the photograph. Turner played an active role in such bodies in his role as a founder member, and later vice-president of the Photographic Society of London. This selection of photographs encompasses Turner’s earliest experiments in photography, made barely ten years after the announcement of the invention of the medium.
Text reason:
Summary description

Persistent shareable link for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/ddbc7e1f-3234-37a9-9bc5-40cc9862fb76

Use licence for this record: CC BY-NC

Attribution for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/ddbc7e1f-3234-37a9-9bc5-40cc9862fb76, Victoria and Albert Museum, CC BY-NC

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