Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Hill and Adamson’s four-year collaboration yielded around 3,000 photographs, including portraits of members of the middle and upper classes and, in what may be the first social documentary project, of the working class. Included in their survey of contemporary life were numerous portraits of the fishermen’s wives in the villages around Edinburgh. The women, garbed in distinctive striped skirts and aprons, cleaned their husbands’ catch, then carried it in wicker baskets to the city where they offered it for sale. They were reported to be hard bargainers. Hill and Adamson respectfully recorded not only their likenesses but also their names.
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The Misses Grierson
Mrs. Anne Rigby and Lady Elizabeth Eastlake
Portrait of Two Men (John Henning and Alexander Handyside Ri
Elizabeth Rigby, later Lady Eastlake (1809-1893)
View of a river with a promenade
Mrs. Anna Brownell Jameson
James Linton and Three Boys, Newhaven
Alexander Rutherford, William Ramsay, and John Liston, Newha
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Newha
David Octavius Hill|Ingals|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — [Newh
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Newha
David Octavius Hill — Mrs. Logan and Two Unknown Women, Newh
David Octavius Hill — Mrs. Anne Rigby and Lady Elizabeth Eas
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Fishe
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Newha
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Newha
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Newha
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Newha
David Octavius Hill|Robert Adamson|Hill and Adamson — Newha