About this artwork
Studio photography in the nineteenth century was a serious business, and most of their photographs show solemn individuals. This picture, by contrast, has a much more relaxed air about it. The sitters are the photographer John Moffat's own children. While Nelly who stands at the back, is serious enough to be taken for her own mother. Frank on the right, who later became a photographer himself, is smiling knowledgeably at his father. The six year old on the left, Sophia, looks pretty bored. As an adult she took an interest in Egyptology and Occultism and even picked up smoking.
Updated before 2020
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artist:John MoffatScottish (1819 - 1894)
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title:Nelly, Frank, Sophia and Fred Moffat
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date created:12 August 1862
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materials:Ambrotype
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measurements:7.30 x 6.00 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Edinburgh Photographic Society Collection, gifted 1987
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accession number:PGP EPS 140
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gallery:
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depicted:
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subject:
John Moffat
John Moffat
John Moffat's family moved from Aberdeen to Edinburgh when he was seven years old. His first business dealt in engraved and chalk/crayon portraits. In 1853 he set up his photographic studio in Princes Street where it remained for more than a hundred years. He was principally a portrait photographer...