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Alexander Bassano

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Occupation
  
photographer

Name
  
Alexander Bassano

Role
  
Photographer


Alexander Bassano imagesnpgorguk80080080mw54780jpg

Born
  
1 May 1829 (
1829-05-01
)
London

Died
  
October 21, 1913, London, United Kingdom

Similar People
  
Albert - Prince Consort, Mary of Teck, William IV of the United Ki

Alice par Alexander Bassano


Alexander Bassano (10 May 1829 – 21 October 1913) was an English photographer who was a leading royal and high society portrait photographer in Victorian London. His most famous photo was the one of Earl Kitchener in the Lord Kitchener Wants You army recruitment poster during the First World War.

Contents

Alexander Bassano NPG x96611 Sir Edward John Poynter 1st Bt Large Image

Biography

Alexander Bassano The Garden Of Forking Paths

Alessandro Bassano was the second youngest child of Italian Clemente Bassano, originally a fishmonger of Cranbourne Street, later an oilman and warehouseman of Jermyn Street, London, and his English wife, Elizabeth Browne. He later anglicised his first name to Alexander.

Alexander Bassano FileThe Bassano family by Alexander Bassano 3jpg

Bassano received early artistic training with artists Augustus Egg and William Beverley. He opened his first studio in 1850 in Regent Street. The studio then moved to Piccadilly 1859-1863, to Pall Mall and then to 25 Old Bond Street in 1877. There was also a Bassano branch studio at 132 King's Road, Brighton from 1893 to 1899.

Alexander Bassano Woman modeling eveningwear for the retailer Harrods 1925

The Old Bond Street studio was decorated with carbon photographic prints and plaster busts, and was large enough to accommodate an 80-foot panoramic background scene mounted on rollers, which provided a variety of outdoor scenes or court backgrounds. He had taken portraits of William Ewart Gladstone and even Queen Victoria. Bassano's head of Lord Kitchener formed the basis of the First World war recruiting poster Your Country Needs You. Bassano retired from work at the studio around 1903, when the premises were extensively refurbished and relaunched as "Bassano Ltd, Royal Photographers".

The studio moved once again in 1921: a move written about by the Lady's Pictorial at the time. The article described about a million negatives, all systematically numbered, which had to be moved from the cellars of the premises to the new location at 38 Dover Street. The company became "Bassano and Vandyk" in 1964. The following year it incorporated Elliott & Fry, a photographic partnership that had been running in Baker Street since 1863. In 1977, the company became "Industrial Photographic", based at 35 Moreton Street, SW1.

Many glass plates from the Bassano Studios, including some by Alexander Bassano, are held in the National Portrait Gallery, London. The Museum of London holds a large number of the fashion-related plates.

The National Portrait Gallery held an exhibit of his work, Alexander Bassano: Victorian Photographer in 2013, the centenary of his death.

Personal life

He married Adelaide (née Lancaster) in 1850. They had a son, Clement George Alexander, and two daughters, Adelaide Fanny Louise and Camilla Teresa.

His sister Louisa Bassano was a noted singer and teacher.

References

Alexander Bassano Wikipedia