The Duchess of Cambridge is putting her education to use. Kate Middleton—now Duchess Catherine—is curatating a spring exhibition of Victorian photography at London’s National Portrait Gallery, where she is a patron.
According to the museum, the duchess selected several images for “Victorian Giants: The Birth of Art Photography” and wrote the foreword to the exhibition catalogue. Her interest in 19th-century photography dates back to her time studying art history at the University of St. Andrews where she chose the topic as the subject of her undergraduate thesis.
Opening in March, the exhibition examines the work of four groundbreaking 19th-century artists—Julia Margaret Cameron (1815–79), Lewis Carrol (1823–98), Lady Clementina Hawarden (1822–65), and Oscar Gustave Rejlander (1813–75)—whose work explored the then-fledgling medium of photography. “Here visitors can see the birth of an idea—raw, edgy, experimental—the Victorian Avant-Garde, not just in photography, but in art writ large,” the National Portrait Gallery’s head of photography Phillip Prodger said in a statement.
In her forward, the duchess writes that she is particularly interested in photos of Victorian children, which figure prominently in her selection of works for the exhibition. “These photographs allow us to reflect on the importance of preserving and appreciating childhood while it lasts,” she says. “Children held a special place in the Victorian imagination and were celebrated for their seemingly boundless potential. This notion still rings true for us today.” Read more