Charles Jones British, 1866-1959
Broccoli Late Queen, c. 1900
Gold toned silver gelatin print
Paper size: 10.5 x 15 cm
Frame size: 23.5 x 28.5 cm
Frame size: 23.5 x 28.5 cm
Signed and titled in pencil verso
Further images
Literature
Born in Wolverhampton in 1866, Charles Jones has been accepted by many as a photographic figure to remain forever mysterious. Little is known of the life of the man or the reasons behind his creation of such a prodigious and concentrated body of work, in particular one that proclaims a subtle yet deeply felt sensibility for nature and provides an undeniably significant contribution to the worlds of both natural and art history.His work was unacknowledged during his lifetime, it was only when in a Bermondsey antique market in London in 1981, historian and photographic collector, Sean Sexton, plucked Charles Jones photographs from certain obscurity by buying a trunk that contained several hundred images of turn of the century photographs. Most of these singular examples of initialed photographs depicted vegetables whilst a third of them were images of fruits and flowers. Charles Jones was fastidious in his executions as he was meticulous in his printings, which were gold toned gelatine silver prints from glass plate negatives.