Sarah Angelina "Angie" Acland (26 June 1849 – 2 December 1930) was an English amateur photographer, known for her portraiture and as a pioneer of colour photography.[1] She was credited by her contemporaries with inaugurating colour photography "as a process for the travelling amateur", by virtue of the photographs she took during two visits to Gibraltar in 1903 and 1904.
At the age of 19, Acland met and was influenced by photographer Julia Margaret Cameron. Acland took portraits and landscapes. For example, she took a portrait photograph of the Prime Minister William Gladstone during a visit by him to Oxford.[6] On the death of her mother in 1878, Sarah became her father's housekeeper at the family home in Broad Street until his death in 1900.[5] In 1885, she instigated a cabmen's shelter in the middle of Broad Street, which stood there until 1912.
Acland started to experiment with colour photography in 1899. Her earliest work was accomplished using the Ives Kromskop and Sanger Shepherd colour processes, in which three separate photographs were taken through red, green, and blue filters. In 1903 Acland visited her brother Admiral Acland at his home in Gibraltar. Acland took photographs of Europa Point looking out from Europe to Africa, pictures of flora in the Admiral's residence, The Mount, and the author and ornithologist Colonel William Willoughby Cole Verner.[7] In 1904, she exhibited at the Annual Exhibition of the Royal Photographic Society of Great Britain with 33 three-colour prints under the title The Home of the Osprey, Gibraltar.[8]
Acland later used the Autochrome process of the Lumiere brothers, introduced in 1907. In her later life after the death of her father, until her death in 1930, Sarah Acland lived in Park Town, North Oxford, taking many colour photographs there. She also visited and widely photographed on the Atlantic island of Madeira, staying at Reid's Hotel to the west of central Funchal.
She never married, and in 1901, the year after her father's death, she moved to Clevedon House, now 10 Park Town, Oxford, where she died in 1930.[2] A blue plaque was dedicated to her on this house on 24 July 2016.[10][11]
Colour photographs and artwork by Sarah Acland featured in an exhibition on Colour Revolution in Victorian times at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford during 2023–4, including the first colour photograph of the portrait of the art critic John Ruskin by the Pre-Raphaelite painter John Everett Millais.[16]
See also
E. J. Bowen, chemist, who later lived in the same house as Sarah Acland in Park Town, Oxford
^Taylor, Roger; Wakeling, Edward (2002). Lewis Carroll: Photographer – The Princeton University Library Albums. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press. pp. 160, 167, 250–251. ISBN0-691-07443-7.
^ ab"The cabmen's shelter". Broad Street, Oxford. Oxford, UK: Headington. Archived from the original on 27 September 2012. Retrieved 19 January 2013.