Julia Margaret Cameron

Julia Margaret Cameron (1815 – 1879) was one of the most important early photographers and is now recognised the world over as a pioneer of photography as art.

A woman ahead of her time, she was ambitious and freethinking when most Victorian women were passive and demure. She took on the challenges of handling large cameras and dangerous chemicals at a time when photography was known as ‘The Black Art’.

Ignoring conventions, she experimented with composition and focus. Today she is credited with creating the first photographic close-up portraits and influencing the subsequent Pictorialism movement with her use of diffused focus.

Her portraits of ‘famous men and fair women’, reflect her time within the Freshwater Circle, the birth of celebrity and her ambitions to be recognised as significant artist of her time.

The majority of her photographic work was created here at Dimbola. Her work is found in major archives the world over including our own growing Permanent Collection.


Exhibitions and events

Dreams - Yana Barabash

Temporary exhibition at Dimbola Museum & Galleries until 07.06.2026

Three and a half years ago, Yana and her mother fled the Russian invasion of Ukraine, leaving their home in Odesa and settled in Ventnor on the Isle of Wight. Originally from Odesa, Yana received...

Eavesdropping on the Other World - Syd Buron

Temporary exhibition at Dimbola Museum & Galleries until 07.06.2026

This exhibition is on   display in the Studio Gallery and features new work by local photographer and artist  Syd Buron . “I am honoured to once again be exhibiting in the room, which was...

Solo Isle of Wight Festival Exhibition

Permanent exhibition

A permanent exhibition focusing on the third and final of the original Isle of Wight Festivals held at Afton in 1970 within sight and sound of Dimbola and which saw Jimi Hendrix’s last major...

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