
Editorial comment for this plate:
“JUST OUT !”
Our frontispiece this week is somewhat belated, owing to a press of circumstances, which could not be controlled; for chickens by no means should be “just out” so late in the season, but it will be none the less welcome, we are sure, for that reason. The picture tells its own story, and therefore needs no comment from us, further than to state that it was made by Miss Emily V. Clarkson, a successful young lady amateur of Pottsdam, N. Y., who is an enthusiastic member of the Chautauqua School of Photography, the Postal Photographic Club, and other photographic organizations. She will be remembered as the author of a Christmas picture which appeared in our holiday number for 1890. The present picture is fully up to her high standard not only as to its originality of idea, but also in its composition and excellent technical execution.
Emilie Vallete Clarkson: 1863-1946
American photographer Emilie Clarkson was a member of the Society of Amateur Photographers of New York and the Camera Club of New York. Her photographs appeared in the publications American Annual of Photography, theAmerican Amateur Photographer and the Photographic Times. Alfred Stieglitz included her work in Camera Notes.—Wikipedia (2026)
Emilie Clarkson Moore: A Lady Photographer
courtesy: Christian A. Peterson. Pictorial Photography at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts : Privately Published, 2012.
Emilie Clarkson began taking photographs in 1888, and she graduated from the Chautauqua School of Photography in 1890. That same year, she joined the Society of Amateur Photographers of New York (SAPNY). She started exhibiting her images the following year. In 1893, she launched solo screenings of her work in New York, Brooklyn and Rochester, and she won prizes for her slides from SAPNY and at competitions run by Amateur Photographer magazine. Clarkson was active in producing lantern slides, and was equally proficient at landscapes, portraits and genre scenes.
In 1894, two prominent photography periodicals included articles about Clarkson and her work. The American Amateur Photographer included her in its list of “Prominent Amateur Photographers.” Alfred Stieglitz was also on the list that year. In August 1894, the Photographic Times ran a three-page article on Clarkson as part of its “Distinguished Photographers of Today” series.
Clarkson became the only female founding member of the Camera Club of New York in 1896. In 1898, the Camera Club’s quarterly, Camera Notes featured a full-page photogravure of her image, “Spinning” and more images were included in two portfolios of photogravures produced by the Camera Club in 1899 and 1901.
She exhibited her work worldwide, including salons in London, Paris, Milan and Calcutta. Her last known display was part of the 1901 Glasgow International Exhibition.