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Portraiture

Prince Albert was an early adopter of portrait photography

    THEODORE BRUNELL (1822-61)

    HRH the Prince's Jagers, McDonald and Cowley, his Head Keeper Turner and some of the other Keepers and Beaters

    Feb 1852

    Daguerreotype | 8.4 x 10.9 cm (image) (image) | RCIN 2932497

    Daguerreotype of a group of men, including the gamekeepers Mr McDonald and Mr Cowley, gathered in front of a wall of Windsor Castle. At the centre of the group a tall man stands with a gun resting on either shoulder. The man in front of him bends down to button his gaiters. All of the men are wearing top hats and most are carrying sticks. The daguerreotype is mounted under glass. Brunell was invited to Windsor Castle at the beginning of 1852 to photograph the royal family. He spent almost three weeks making portraits of the royal children, and also took a number of photographs of the gamekeepers. McDonald and Cowley had originally been employed at Balmoral but by 1848 were working at Windsor, with McDonald in charge of the kennels. Both men were photographed on several occasions over the following years and their portraits appear in the personal albums of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, who as well as collecting portraits of their own family commissioned photographs of their staff.
    • Creator(s)

      Theodore Brunell (1822-61)
      (photographer)

    • 8.4 x 10.9 cm (image) (image)

      14.1 x 16.6 cm (frame, external)

    • Prince Albert’s two Jägers, MacDonald and Cowley, his Head Keeper Turner and some of the other Keepers and Beaters

      Group of Prince Albert's 2 Jägers, McDonald and Cowley, and his Head Keeper, Turner, and some of the other Keepers and Beaters, Windsor

    • Commissioned by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert in 1852