Julia Margaret Cameron and Jane Austen are each luminaries of the nineteenth century who explored the interior lives of girls of their respective fields, pictures and fiction. The legacies of those two trailblazing British ladies converge with the Morgan Library & Museum’s concurrent exhibitions A Lively Mind: Jane Austen at 250 and Arresting Beauty: Julia Margaret Cameron. Each draw on the ladies’s visible and literary archives as an example the complexities and historic significance of their lives.
Writing within the late 18th and early nineteenth century, amid the rise of the British center class and the constraints of inflexible gender roles, Austen captured the wishes and anxieties of girls with needle-sharp precision. In her prose, the interiority of her characters consists of suppressed longing, quiet rise up, and ethical reflection. A Vigorous Thoughts immerses guests in Austen’s world by manuscripts, portraits, and interval interiors that collectively evoke the environment of her life and work.
Upon coming into the exhibition, a small desk with a wood chair shows a quill and handwritten letters, set towards a backdrop of leafy inexperienced wallpaper. This tableau recreates Austen’s writing desk from the eating room of her residence in Chawton, England, now preserved as a museum. {A photograph} of the historic home hangs above, anchoring the show in its real-world setting.
The modest recreation of Austen’s writing desk contrasts with the wood bookshelf close by, which strikes from the intimate to the worldwide, displaying Satisfaction and Prejudice translations in a number of totally different languages. Austen’s imprint is clear throughout varied inventive types, international locations, and generations. A glass case shows uncommon books from the nineteenth century, all biographical accounts of the writer, by writers corresponding to Edward Knatchbull-Hugessen and Oscar Fay Adams; on the wall behind it are portraits of her, together with a miniature watercolor on ivory by an unidentified artist and a metal engraving by William Residence Lizars.

Generations later, the fascination with Austen persists — once I visited, the thrill was palpable round two standout objects on show: a recreation of Austen’s lustrous silk jacket and her famed ring. The gold and turquoise ring — on view in america for the primary time — sparked debate over what artifacts are too traditionally important to depart England after singer Kelly Clarkson temporarily acquired it at auction in 2012.
One other main spotlight is Amy Sherald’s portray of a younger Black man carrying a sweater that includes architectural designs, “A Single Man in Possession of a Good Fortune” (2019). The title is impressed by the well-known opening line of Satisfaction and Prejudice, which references the entanglement of wealth, gender, and marriage: “It’s a reality universally acknowledged, {that a} single man in possession of a luck, should be in need of a spouse.” That such a line would possibly resonate with younger Black males in Twenty first-century America speaks to the endurance and attain of Austen’s writing. A Vigorous Thoughts affords a visually placing and archivally wealthy exploration of Austen’s life and legacy. By combining recreated inside design parts with books, portraits, and even up to date artwork, the exhibition successfully conveys her lasting relevance throughout historic and cultural contexts.

Throughout the hallway, Arresting Magnificence examines the life and work of Victorian photographer Julia Margaret Cameron. Although not as extensively referred to as Austen, Cameron is deeply important to the historical past of pictures; her soft-focus, allegorical portraits exemplify her titular want to “arrest all magnificence that got here earlier than [her].”
Set up view of Julia Margaret Cameron’s “Florence Fisher” (1872), “The Astronomer” (1867), “The Annunciation” (1865-66), “The Pink and White Roses” (1865), “Daisies Pied” (1870-74), and “Prospero and Miranda” (1865) in Arresting Magnificence on the Morgan Library & Museum.
Cameron’s dreamy photographic gaze is straight away obvious within the six works created between 1865 and 1872 that open the present, every portraying a distinct sitter. A young close-up portrait of “Florence Fisher” (1872) depicts the daughter of a buddy who generally posed for Cameron. “The Astronomer” (1867), a shadowy portrait of an nameless sitter with an mental look, is probably impressed by Cameron’s scientist buddy, Sir John Herschel; it displays the Victorian-era fascination with science and philosophy. A non secular portrait, “The Annunciation” (1865–66), portrays fashions appearing out the story of archangel Gabriel’s declaration to the Virgin Mary, whereas the floral motifs in “The Pink and White Roses” (1865) and “Daisies Pied” (1870–74) symbolize Victorian concepts of femininity and purity in pastoral scenes.

Cameron’s life was punctuated with intervals of deep disappointment and loneliness, and her images usually evoke related emotions. The fashions categorical quiet moments of solitude and reflection. Her oeuvre is replete with themes associated to Christianity, well-known literature (particularly for a Victorian viewers), and younger ladies. In a single significantly shifting {photograph}, “Sappho” (1865), Cameron’s maid, Mary Hillier, poses as the traditional Greek poet from Lesbos. Regardless of the Victorian sensibilities concerning ladies’s home and subservient roles, Cameron imbued her photographic topics with company and depth; ladies and ladies, whether or not beginner fashions, servants, or household mates, are virtually at all times the protagonists. In 1874, she labored significantly strenuously on a collection of images illustrating Alfred Tennyson’s narrative poetry cycle Idylls of the King (1859–85) upon the author’s invitation.
A duplicate of Cameron’s posthumously printed memoir on view exhibits the mark of her hand as a author. Her daughter died in 1873, and the next 12 months she printed Annals of My Glass Home, wherein she attracts heart-wrenching parallels between her profession as a photographer and the lifetime of a rising baby.
Amid monetary points, Cameron and her husband left England for Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) in 1875. Her intimate relationship to the British Empire is plain; she was a White, British lady who was born in India and died in Sri Lanka. “A Group of Kalutara Peasants” (1878) and “Two Younger Ladies” (c. 1875–79), made within the closing years of her life, struck me as significantly indicative of colonial dynamics. Each images depict primarily nameless plantation employees who labored for the Camerons. The contrasting distance between the labor of the photographer and the plantation employee is uncomfortable. Students have usually maintained that such photographs present extra kindness towards their topics than these of different British photographers, with their sharp colonialist gaze. Nonetheless, I ponder if the softness and vulnerability communicated in Cameron’s work ought to essentially excuse the brutality of imperialism upholding her place as a photographer within the colonies. Maybe this dynamic begets ambivalence extra so than both celebration or detraction. Whether or not she photographed her personal social circle in England or working ladies in Sri Lanka, Empire stays the backdrop.

Austen and Cameron have been exceptionally proficient and artistic ladies whose legacies usually seem extra benevolent than these of many others from their social class and imperial context. Nonetheless, it’s essential to grapple with the colonial constructions — and the labor of colonized ladies and communities — that helped maintain the lives and work of those pioneering inventive figures usually celebrated as feminist heroes. What wouldn’t it imply to admire these ladies’s artistic brilliance whereas acknowledging the inequalities that formed their worlds? Whose tales stay untold behind their celebrated legacies? And the way would possibly we broaden our understanding of feminist artwork and literary historical past to create space for these voices?
Each exhibitions gesture towards the privilege and energy these ladies held inside their social worlds, but I’m left questioning concerning the views of marginalized ladies of their eras. With out discounting the inventive and literary contributions of Austen and Cameron, or the general gender hierarchies of the time, would possibly these unacknowledged experiences problem or complicate the methods we now learn the feminist dimensions of the ladies on the middle of those exhibitions?






A Lively Mind: Jane Austen at 250 and Arresting Beauty: Julia Margaret Cameron proceed on the Morgan Library & Museum (225 Madison Avenue, Murray Hill, Manhattan) by September 14.
A Vigorous Thoughts was organized by Dale Stinchcomb and Juliette Wells. Arresting Magnificence was organized by Joel Smith, Richard L. Menschel and Allison Pappas.