Currently not on view

When the Day's Work is Done,

1877

Henry Peach Robinson, 1830–1901; born Ludlow, England; died Tunbridge Wells, England
x1991-2
Robinson brought the art of photography into sync with British Academic painting of his time through popular, large-scale compositions such as When the Day's Work is Done. He used five negatives to create this unique combination print-note the appearance of dark "seams" wherever two negatives meet, as at the edge of the carpet in the foreground. Each negative contributes a distinct allegorical or narrative note. Winter vegetables in the foreground suggest the pious couple's agrarian labors, while the glimpse of town through the window hints at their distance from worldly affairs. Thanks to Robinson's printing technique, every detail appears in sharp focus, ready to be drawn into service in the homiletic reading prompted by the picture's title.

More Context

With the exhibition of <em>Fading Away</em> (1858), a melodramatic scene portraying a dying maiden and her mourning relatives, Robinson brought photography into sync with contemporary painting. His considerable fame grew with the publication of his <em>Pictorial Effect in Photography</em> (1869). The book offered an aesthetic credo and practical manual of combination printing — a painstaking procedure by which numerous details are photographed separately, at precisely matching scale, and the resulting negatives merged in a single print. <em>Pictorial Effect</em> remained in print for decades, finally making Robinson the target of a generation of critics who regarded contrivance in photography as an unforgivable vice. <em>When the Day’s Work Is Done</em> — an international prizewinner — brings five negatives into play, each contributing an allegorical or narrative note. Between the garden basket in the foreground (testimony to hours spent tilling the soil) and a distant town glimpsed through the window (scene of worldly temptation), an aged couple sits, she sewing and he reading from the Bible. Thanks to Robinson’s technique, every detail is in focus and thus ready to be drafted into service in the homiletic interpretation prompted by the picture’s title.

Information

Title
When the Day's Work is Done
Dates

1877

Medium
Albumen print
Dimensions
image (sight): 54.3 x 75.7 cm. (21 3/8 x 29 13/16 in.) mount: 75.4 x 96 cm. (29 11/16 x 37 13/16 in.) frame: 70.2 × 91.8 × 2.2 cm (27 5/8 × 36 1/8 × 7/8 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, anonymous gift
Object Number
x1991-2
Place Made

Europe, England, Royal Tunbridge Wells

Culture