This informal illustrated talk will explore the photographic practice of Augusta Crofton Dillon (1839 - 1928) of Mote Park House, Roscommon and Clonbrock House, Ahascragh, Galway. Crofton was a talented amateur photographer. Her work is included in one of Ireland's finest photographic collections - the Clonbrock Collection at the National Library of Ireland - and is highly sought-after by private collectors worldwide.
Orla Fitzpatrick has an extensive knowledge of historical photographic practices in Ireland. In her research into Augusta Crofton's work she has examined a wide range of previously neglected source materials. In this talk, Fitzpatrick will draw on her close examination of Crofton's diaries and personal account books. They span a thirty-year period from 1865 to 1895 and reveal new insights into Crofton's experiments with the wet plate collodion process in the 1860s through to her adoption of later technologies and hand-held instant cameras.
This talk is presented as part of In Our Own Image: Photography in Ireland 1839 to the Present - the first comprehensive historical and critical survey of photography in Ireland. The launch exhibition in this year-long programme is on display at the Printworks, Dublin Castle until February 5th.
See more and book: https://app.squarespacescheduling.com/schedule.php?owner=20183240&calendarID=6459355
Livestream: https://www.youtube.com/c/GalleryOfPhotographyDublin/featured
Photography, femininity and leisure: Augusta Crofton Dillon's photographic practice, 1865 to 1895
Dr Orla Fitzpatrick
Live and streamed
Monday, 31 January at 1.15pm
Poddle Room, Printworks, Dublin Castle, Dublin, Ireland
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