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PAST EXHIBITION ARCHIVE
Victorian Women by Walery
Showcase display
Victorian Galleries - Room 28
18 December 2004 - 4 September 2005

Alexandra of Denmark
by Walery, c.1889

Dame Millicent Fawcett (née Garrett)
by Walery, c.1889

Queen Victoria
by Walery, published December 1889
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Between 1888 and 1896 the firm
of Walery issued a remarkable series of portraits entitled Our
Celebrities which were published as a monthly part-work by
the publisher Sampson, Low together with biographical text on
the subjects explain why they should be considered to qualify
as "celebrities". The part works subsequently became
available as bound volumes.
Walery was the by-line adopted
by two photographers, a father and son who both adopted the working
name Walery. The elder, Count Stanislaw Julian Ostrorog (1830-1890)
was born in Mohylewo, Lithuania but spent most of his youth in
Paris where the family went in 1831 to take political asylum.
He served as a Captain in the 5th Lancers, in the Staff Polish
Division as aide-de -camp to General Count Zamoiski on the British
Government's payroll under General Storks. Subsequently he was
promoted to colonel in the Turkish army in 1854. Around three
years later he moved to London. He became a British citizen in
1862. As a professional photographer he first set up a studio
in Marseilles and then Paris, which he sold in 1878, before opening
his first studio in London in May 1883 at 5 Conduit Street. Following
on from his successful portrait sitting with Queen Victoria in
1886 he moved to 164 Regent Street.
On his death in June 1890, his
son Stanislaw Julian Ignacy, Count Ostrorog (1863-1935) continued
the business and later combined (between 1890-1900) with another
photographer Alfred Ellis to become Ellis and Walery. According
to records of copyright registration now held at The National
Archives at Kew some the later portraits in the "Celebrities"
series were taken for Walery by Achille Victor Bosco of Walery
Villa in Muswell Hill. In 1894 Walery gave an interview to Woman
at Home magazine, which illustrated the extreme splendour
of the firm's lavish reception rooms in Regent Street.
In 1900 Walery moved to Paris
to open a studio on the Rue de Irondes and began to specialise
in the showgirls of Folies Bergere and subjects such as Mata
Hari. His portraits of Josephine Baker are particularly celebrated
and one from 1926 was recently included in the American National
Portrait Gallery's book and exhibition Women of Our Time
(2002)
This first display of Walery's
work focuses on the portraits of leading women of the era including
performers Madame Albani, Ellen Terry, Lady Bancroft and Sarah
Bernhardt, scientists Elizabeth Garrett Anderson and Millicent
Fawcett and members of royalty including Queen Alexandra and
Queen Victoria. Nearly all the poses show the subjects posed
as three quarter length, which Walery believed, was the most
insightful way of making a portrait study.
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