Charles A. Woolley
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Charles Alfred Woolley (17 December 1834 – 1922) was born in Hobart Town, Tasmania, Australia. He was an Australian photographer but also created drawings, portraits and visual art. He is best known for his photographic portraits of the five surviving Oyster Cove
Aboriginal people Indigenous peoples are culturally distinct ethnic groups whose members are directly descended from the earliest known inhabitants of a particular geographic region and, to some extent, maintain the language and culture of those original people ...
taken in August 1866 and exhibited at the ''Intercolonial Exhibition of Australasia''
colonial exhibition A colonial exhibition was a type of international exhibition that was held to boost trade. During the 1880s and beyond, colonial exhibitions had the additional aim of bolstering popular support for the various colonial empires ...
in Melbourne the same year.


Life

Woolley and his elder brother were the sons of Joseph William Woolley (1797–1880) and Frances née Facy. Joseph was a cabinetmaker who worked in a studio next to his father's upholstery and carpet warehouse. The studio was on 42 Macquarie Street. Charles Woolley was married twice. The first of his two marriages took place on 19 July 1866 to Ada, the eldest daughter of C. H. Huxtable of Elphinstone Road, Hobart Town. Woolley's second marriage came almost a decade later on 13 July 1876 to Harriett Elizabeth the second daughter of George Burn of Hobart Town. He died in 1922 in Hobart Town.


Works

From 1859 to 1870, he worked in a studio in Macquarie Street in Hobart generating various portraits as well as In his early work he used wet-plate to photograph Hobart and surrounding areas producing
stereotypes In social psychology, a stereotype is a generalized belief about a particular category of people. It is an expectation that people might have about every person of a particular group. The type of expectation can vary; it can be, for example ...
. When Woolley travelled he did not take a darkroom tent with him to the forests. Instead he scavenged caravans and travelled regularly to produce wet-plate landscapes. One of his typical photographs was a Tasmanian shot "Rocking Stone, on Mount Wellington" (1859) a stereograph which was printed in
sepia Sepia may refer to: Biology * ''Sepia'' (genus), a genus of cuttlefish Color * Sepia (color), a reddish-brown color * Sepia tone, a photography technique Music * ''Sepia'', a 2001 album by Coco Mbassi * ''Sepia'' (album) by Yu Takahashi * " ...
on an 8in. X 7in. (71mm. X 68mm.) stereo card, was included in Alfred Abbott's ''Album of views of Hobart, Launceston and Victoria''. Another wet-plate image, "The Old Theological Institute" was taken around the 1860s in Hobart Town, and can be found in the Archives Office of Tasmania. A woodcut made from his picture "Government House, Hobart Town" appeared in the ''Illustrated Melbourne Post'' in 1864. Woolley, like most photographers of the day, took primarily portrait photographs. Numerous examples are extant including some overpainted with watercolours. According to Henry Button, Henry Dowling 's portrait of Sir
Richard Dry Sir Richard Dry, KCMG (20 September 1815 – 1 August 1869) was an Australian politician, the son of United Irish convict, who was Premier of Tasmania from 24 November 1866 until 1 August 1869 when he died in office. Dry was the first Tasmani ...
, in the
Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery The Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery (QVMAG) is a museum located in Launceston, Tasmania, Australia. The QVMAG is the largest museum in Australia not located in a capital city. History The foundation stone for the original building to ...
, Launceston, Tasmania, was painted in England from a Woolley photograph. Less typical examples of his work include the seven published photographs Woolley took of four
tableaux vivants A (; often shortened to ; plural: ), French for "living picture", is a static scene containing one or more actors or models. They are stationary and silent, usually in costume, carefully posed, with props and/or scenery, and may be theatrica ...
designed and produced by
Louisa Anne Meredith Louisa Anne Meredith (20 July 1812 – 21 October 1895), also known as Louisa Anne Twamley, was an Anglo/Australian writer, illustratorSally O'Neill,, Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 5, Melbourne University Press, 1974, pp 239–24 ...
at Government House, Hobart Town, on 18 January 1866. A Thomas Wingate also took a photograph and all eight were published later that year as an album: ''Souvenir of the Masques of Christmas, and of the Old and New Year.'' He also worked with Louisa Anne Meredith on the "First Tableau, left group" 1866. In his work "Second Tableau – Right Group" four men and a woman represent Australian industry: a
gold-digger Gold digger is a term for a person, typically a woman, who engages in a type of transactional relationship for money rather than love. If it turns into marriage, it is a type of marriage of convenience. Etymology and usage The term "gold ...
, vine-grower,
reaper A reaper is a farm implement or person that reaps (cuts and often also gathers) crops at harvest when they are ripe. Usually the crop involved is a cereal grass. The first documented reaping machines were Gallic reapers that were used in Roma ...
, and a shearer and gleaner. While most of Woolley’s photographs illustrate aspects of the festive season in the antipodes, he was one of the photographers appointed to photograph the Duke of Edinburgh's visit to Hobart Town in 1868. In August 1866, Woolley took photographic portraits in his studio of the five surviving Oyster Cove Aboriginal people which became his best known work. These were exhibited at the ''Intercolonial Exhibition of Australasia''
colonial exhibition A colonial exhibition was a type of international exhibition that was held to boost trade. During the 1880s and beyond, colonial exhibitions had the additional aim of bolstering popular support for the various colonial empires ...
in Melbourne later that year. Two of the portraits were of
Truganini Truganini (also known as Lallah Rookh; c. 1812 – 8 May 1876) was an Aboriginal Tasmanian woman. She was one of the last native speakers of the Tasmanian languages and one of the last individuals solely of Aboriginal Tasmanian descent. Trug ...
, a female, and
William Lanne William Lanne (1835 – 3 March 1869), also spelt William Lanné and also known as King Billy or William Laney, was an Aboriginal Tasmanian man, known for being the last " full-blooded" Aboriginal man in the colony of Tasmania. Early lif ...
, also known as King Billy. These works are now exhibited in the National Library, and the State Libraries of New South Wales, Tasmania and Victoria. James Bonwick's publication ''The Last of the Tasmanians'' (1870) included several of the photographs and shortly after engravings started to appear. Woolley exhibited the prints again in 1875 at the Victorian Intercolonial Exhibition. A few of the original sets survive, mainly in English collections, as well as copies that J. W. Beattie made. After Lanne’s death in 1869, his grave was desecrated and his body mutilated and a full sized bust was produced by an artist named Francisco Santé. The ''Evening Mail'' advertised that it could be seen for a "small fee". Though Woolley was not known as a sculptor, the ''Hobart Town Examiner'' reported that "numerous" busts he had produced were at Walch and Sons and Birchall’s bookshops. As Charles Woolley photographed Aboriginal people of different nations he highlighted the details of how each was different, mainly anatomically. Woolley's "Trugannini" was produced as an engraving in the Atlas, the vignette form it took provided a visual metaphor for the fading out of the Tasmanian Aboriginal people.


References


External links


National Portrait Gallery images of William Lanne and Truganini

Monash Art Gallery Portrait of Truganini
{{DEFAULTSORT:Woolley, Charles Photographers from Tasmania 1834 births 1922 deaths