Lichfield Cathedral from the North-West
1858
Artist, British, 1819 - 1869

Architecture continued to be one of Fenton's favored subjects throughout his short but highly acclaimed artistic career. He photographed the ruined abbeys of Tintern and Rievaulx and the grand cathedrals of Salisbury and Lincoln. As critics of the time noted, he repeatedly placed people as well as natural and man-made objects in his compositions to demonstrate how these monuments to British history continued to be vital entities in the present. He achieved this in Lichfield Cathedral from the North-west, positioning his camera across the street and to the side in order to give equal weight and importance to the hitching post, the well, the 19th-century lamppost, and the massive cathedral behind them.
Artwork overview
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Medium
albumen print
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Credit Line
-
Dimensions
image: 35.2 x 43 cm (13 7/8 x 16 15/16 in.)
mount: 50.7 x 68.5 cm (19 15/16 x 26 15/16 in.) -
Accession
2005.52.2
Artwork history & notes
Provenance
The photographer; by descent from his brother; (Hans P. Kraus, Jr., Inc., New York); NGA purchase, 2005.
Associated Names
Exhibition History
2019
The Eye of the Sun: Nineteenth-Century Photographs from the National Gallery of Art, National Gallery of Art, Washington, 2019, unnumbered catalogue.
Inscriptions
Engraved lower center: Photograph by R. Fenton; lower right printed label affixed: 36 Lichfield Cathedral, from the North-west; by later hand, bottom center in graphite: F110; by Hans P. Kraus, Jr., Inc., lower left verso in graphite: 300602.63
Wikidata ID
Q64170551