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      • Among her “studies from life”, Hawarden created a series of photographs that draw on stylistic motifs from the silhouette tradition, staged in disparate locations, from a carpenter’s workshop at their Dundrum estate in Ireland, to her large family home in London, transforming imitative portraiture into photographic works of art.
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  2. But by creating exquisite images of her adolescent daughters, she staked out new perimeters for art photography. Clementina Maude and Isabella Grace, photograph by Lady Clementina Hawarden, about 1864, England. Museum no. 366-1947. © Victoria and Albert Museum, London. Working methods. Hawarden made albumen prints from wet-collodion negatives.

    • Did Lady Clementina Hawarden create art photography?1
    • Did Lady Clementina Hawarden create art photography?2
    • Did Lady Clementina Hawarden create art photography?3
    • Did Lady Clementina Hawarden create art photography?4
    • Did Lady Clementina Hawarden create art photography?5
  3. Jul 24, 2020 · Hawarden was the first female photographer to receive critical recognition for creating technically perfect prints. She exhibited her work with the Photographic Society of London, in 1863 and 1864, under the titles, ‘Studies from Life’ and ‘Photographic Studies’, and was awarded the Society’s silver medal for both.

  4. She took up photography in 1857; using her daughters as models, she created a body of work remarkable for its technical brilliance and its original depiction of nascent womanhood. Lady Hawarden showed her work in the 1863 and 1864 exhibitions of the Photographic Society.

  5. Clementina Maude, Viscountess Hawarden (née Elphinstone Fleeming; 1 June 1822 – 19 January 1865), commonly known as Lady Clementina Hawarden, was a British amateur portrait photographer of the Victorian era. She produced over 800 photographs mostly of her adolescent daughters.

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    • Photographer
    • 19 January 1865 (aged 42), London, England
    • Clementina Elphinstone Fleeming, 1 June 1822, Cumbernauld, Dunbartonshire, Scotland
  6. Clementina Maude, Viscountess Hawarden (née Elphinstone Fleeming; 1 June 1822 – 19 January 1865), commonly known as Lady Clementina Hawarden, was a British amateur portrait photographer of the Victorian era. She produced over 800 photographs mostly of her adolescent daughters.

  7. Hawarden, born Clementina Elphinstone Fleeming, was one of the first female photographers in Britain. Most of her work was made while she was living in the Kensington neighborhood of London, near the present-day Victoria & Albert Museum that currently holds the collection of her photographs.

  8. Jan 19, 2023 · Despite the rigours of motherhood, Lady Clementina didn’t let her passion for photography waver. The family moved back to London in 1859, and Lady Clementina began photographing her daughters, first creating stereoscopic photographs, and later moving to large-format portraits. She set up a studio in the family’s South Kensington home.

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