Contemplative Odalisque

Getty Museum

Contemplative Odalisque

Creator

Roger Fenton

Photographer · 1819–1869

All works by this person →
Artist

After studying law in London, Roger Fenton trained as a painter in London and Paris. He exhibited his paintings and helped found a drawing school that gave evening instruction to working men in London. Active in the arts, Fenton corresponded with French photographers Gustave Le Gray and Henri Le Secq, which may have led him to pursue photography. Fenton's photographic career was brilliant yet brie

More on Getty ULAN
Date
1858
Medium
Albumen silver print
Culture
English
Department
Photographs
Institution
Getty Museum

Three years after traveling in the Crimea, Roger Fenton made a series of Orientalist photographs in his London studio using props gathered during his travels and non-Eastern models. *Orientalism* refers to just such romanticized depictions of imagined scenes of Muslim culture in the Ottoman Empire and its territories in the Near East and North Africa. Orientalist scenes were more often fiction than fact. Cultural biases and misunderstandings were laid down on paper or canvas and frequently became the only source of information on the subjects depicted. When a group of these Orientalist photographs was exhibited in 1858, one reviewer described them as "truly representing some phases in the life of this interesting people." But not everyone so easily accepted Fenton's images at face value; a more astute critic called for "the necessity of having real national types as models." The same model shown here also appears as "Nubian" and "Egyptian" in other photographs by Fenton. This photograph may have originally been exhibited with the title *The Reverie*. The odalisque, meaning a slave or concubine in a harem, poses upon her sofa. Barefoot, blouse open, her surroundings convey a sensual disarray that conforms to an Orientalizing fantasy of the available woman. Gift of Professors Joseph and Elaine Monsen

The authoritative record is held by Getty Museum. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.

Get printable QR codes

Open QR codes for this object page and the museum record. They stay collapsed until needed.

Open this page
See at Getty Museum

Related across collections

Semantically similar works from Getty Museum and other institutions.