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Portraits to Dream In
Read Alastair Sooke's review of Francesca Woodman and Julia Margaret Cameron: Portraits to Dream In at the National Portrait Gallery on The Telegraph.
Read MoreRead Sean O'Hagan's review of "Francesca Woodman and Julia Margaret Cameron: Portraits to Dream In" at the National Portrait Gallery on "The Guardian."
Read MoreIt’s your last chance to see “Portraits to Dream In,” beautifully installed to recall the period from cool, blue dusk to warm, rosy dawn and reflect what curator Magdalene Keaney describes as “the dream space” shared by both Woodman's and Cameron’s photographs.
Read MoreFrancesca Woodman and Julia Margaret Cameron frequently used doubling in their photographs.
Read MoreJulia Margaret Cameron is well-known for her portraits of others, often poetically staged allegories. While Francesca Woodman’s work is widely assumed to be self-portraiture, she, like Cameron, worked within a circle of friends and contemporaries who often posed for her.
Read MoreAmong the parallels between Francesca Woodman’s and Julia Margaret Cameron’s practices explored in “Portraits to Dream In” are their photographs of men.
Read MoreAlthough both Francesca Woodman and Julia Margaret Cameron are well-known for the portraits they made indoors—in studios converted from domestic or industrial spaces—each artist significantly explored the female subject in nature.
Read MoreIn “Portraits to Dream In,” Francesca Woodman’s and Julia Margaret Cameron’s photographs are paired not based on chronology or art historical influence, but rather with an eye to ways that considering the work of these two artists side by side allows for new readings of each of their work and intentions.
Read MoreRead Ted Loos' article on Francesca Woodman and her upcoming exhibitions at Gagosian and the National Portrait Gallery.
Read More“In diverse cultural histories over millennia, angels have had the capacity to move between spiritual and earthly realms, the conscious and unconscious, and are often met in a dream or vision,” exhibition curator Magdalene Keaney writes in the catalogue for “Francesca Woodman and Julia Margaret Cameron: Portraits to Dream In.”
Read More"Francesca Woodman and Julia Margaret Cameron: Portraits to Dream In" offers fresh perspectives on the work of two of the most influential women in the history of photography who lived and worked nearly a century apart.
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