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Portraiture

Prince Albert was an early adopter of portrait photography

WILLIAM EDWARD KILBURN (1818-91)

Queen Victoria with the Princess Royal, the Prince of Wales, Princess Alice, Princess Helena and Prince Alfred

17 Jan 1852

Daguerreotype | 9.1 x 11.5 cm (image) | RCIN 2932491

Daguerreotype of Queen Victoria (1819-1901) with Princess Victoria (1840-1901), Albert Edward, Prince of Wales (1841-1910), Princess Alice (1843-78), Princess Helena (1846-1923) and Prince Alfred (1844-1900). The children are gathered in a group around Queen Victoria, whose face has been scratched out. The daguerreotype has been mounted under glass.

Kilburn, as one of the leading photographers in London at this time, was commissioned to photograph the Royal family on a number of occasions. He made this group portrait of Queen Victoria with her five eldest children in January 1852. The Queen found that, when the exposure was made, she had her eyes closed. In an attempt to remove what she perceived as an unflattering image of herself, she scratched out her face on the plate, while sparing the images of the children. She recorded in her journal: ‘Went back to the Gardens, where a Daguerreotype by Mr. Kilburn was taken of me & 5 of the children. The day was splendid for it. Mine was unfortunately horrid, but the children’s were pretty’. A second version of the group portrait was made and subsequently hand coloured, but today it is only known through a nineteenth-century photographic copy.
  • Creator(s)

    William Edward Kilburn (1818-91) (photographer)

  • 9.1 x 11.5 cm (image)

    14.2 x 16.8 cm (frame) (frame, external)

  • Commissioned by Queen Victoria in 1852