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The Met Alexandra I claim no rights to this image just the colorization. "The Prettiest Doll in the World" Artist:Lewis Carroll (British, Daresbury, Cheshire1898 Guildford) Subject:Alexandra "Xie" Rhoda Kitchin (British, 1925) Date:July 5, 1870 Medium:Albumen silver print from glass negative Dimensions:7 3/4 x 5 13/16 Classification:Photographs Credit Line:Gilman Collection, Purchase, Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Kravis Gift, 2005 Accession Number:2005.100.636 Not on view The Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, a mathematics professor at Oxford better known by his pen name, Lewis Carroll, often photographed friends children outfitted in storybook costumes, playacting the sorts of fantastic scenes that appear in his writing. The model in this photograph, Alexandra Kitchin, posed more than fifty times over eleven years, frequently for images inspired by literature. The title Carroll gave this work is the refrain of the poem The Lost Doll by the popular Victorian author Charles Kingsley. It tells of a child affection for her lost toy, which she finds and dotes on in spite of damage it has suffered. It is unclear whether Xie is meant to recall the girl or her doll, but the emulsion peeling from the edges of the glass negative which Carroll purposefully retained during printing frames her obstinance, a visual echo of the dramas played out in childhood imagination. Photographs (36,130) No known restrictions on reproduction.
You gave, with your colorization, Alexandra a more natural look, not an easy job if one regards the state of the original image, but you've it done expertly, per usual, my friend.