professional photographer and wood-carver, was born in England. In 1855 he came to Sydney, where he worked as a photographer. Although advertising in October 1858 that he would 'dispose of a Photographic Business, cheap’, two months later customers could still have their portraits ('highly coloured and enamelled, in cases, 3s 6d’) taken at the same premises in Riley Street, opposite the pump south of South Head Road. By November 1860, however, Pickering had opened a new studio at 612 George Street South, Brickfield Hill, and was offering coloured and 'enamelled’ cased portraits for 2s 6d. Initially called the United Volunteer Portrait Gallery, the name was soon abandoned. The studio became so well known that its sole address was 'Pickering, Brickfield Hill’.

As Cato points out, Pickering was 'The Family Photographer’, and it was to his studio that Sydney’s middle classes flocked. He also provided souvenir photographs of the famous and infamous, the latter including the bushrangers Frank Gardiner with two colleagues (c. 1860, Mitchell Library) and John Gilbert. At his recently improved and extended gallery in 1862 he was producing both cartes-de-visite ('printed off on paper in a rich brown tint’) and ambrotypes ('coloured in a finished style … which evinces an intimate acquaintance with all the elegant mysteries of the pictorial art’). He subsequently opened a second studio at 432 George Street. Both places were offering three cartes-de-visite for 5s or eight for 10s in 1864. The George Street branch was extensively damaged by fire in December 1865 when Samuel Hebblewhite’s shop next door burnt down and, although Pickering advertised the following February that the damage had been repaired and the rooms rebuilt 'on the most approved plan’, John Yates had taken over within a few weeks. Pickering continued at Brickfield Hill.

In June 1864 he was reported as having produced a 'remarkably faithful and animated’ life-size self-portrait, the outline, enlarged by the solar process, being 'afterwards filled up and completed by the pencil [paint] of the artist’. As well as such large overpainted portraits, Pickering produced untouched solar camera enlargements 'universally pronounced to be characteristic portraits and good pictures, without being in any way touched up by the pencil’. Said to have had the appearance of 'mezzotinto or sepia’, these could be purchased as 'an outline and basis for portraits to be finished off in oil’ if desired, cited examples of untouched likenesses he had sold from his studio being of Mr Dalgleish, Mr Westcot, Mr Waterford and Mr Edward Reeve. Freeman’s Journal described this solar enlarging process in 1868 and pronounced the coloured examples on display at Pickering’s studio 'equal to any oil painting’.

In 1865 Pickering’s cartes-de-visite cost 7s 6d a dozen and he was also advertising diamond cameo portraits ('four different views of the face on one card’). He travelled around the countryside in a van, taking views and portraits 'In order to accommodate gentlemen who wish their country residence to be photographed, or for the convenience of invalids who are unable to leave home’. In August 1870 the Illustrated Sydney News reproduced a panorama of Sydney reported to have been 'taken expressly’ for the paper by Pickering, the original photograph being 5 feet (1.52 m) long. A month later he was appointed official photographer to the Sydney Intercolonial Exhibition.

Under the direction of Colonial Architect James Barnet, Pickering was commissioned by the New South Wales government in January 1871 to prepare 'a number of photographic views of Sydney and its suburbs’ for the forthcoming London International Exhibition. The government printer published 166 of the resulting photographs in a large folio volume, Photographs of Public and Other Buildings, &c. Taken by Authority of the Government of New South Wales, at the Request of the Secretary of State for the Colonies (Sydney 1872). It was shown at the exhibition and copies were presented to distinguished visitors as proof that Sydney’s architectural splendours were no whit inferior to those increasingly filling the skyline of 'Marvellous Melbourne’. Gratifyingly, some were reproduced in the London Graphic in 1879-80.

Most are rather austere, uninhabited images, although Pickering’s view of Sydney’s Government House Stables (designed by Francis Greenway ) includes his travelling photographic van, an informal and modestly self-promotional detail. The Sydney Mail (27 April 1872) considered that most of the buildings he had photographed 'would be an ornament to any city’, although 'People at a distance turning over the leaves of the book may, perhaps, be somewhat puzzled to ascertain why the refreshment room [in Parliament House] should be on a scale so much larger than the Halls of Legislation’. A few of the photographs were considered 'not very successfully taken’, but the album as a whole was thought likely to be beneficial to the colony: 'Most of the pictures are beautiful specimens of photographic art’.

However prestigious, government work (as so often) proved a mistake. Six months after receiving his first commission in June 1871, Charles Percy Pickering of Crown Street was declared bankrupt. He was forced to abandon the portraiture side of his business altogether and his gallery and (reputedly) 20,000 glass negatives were sold. In February 1875, when living in Palmer Street, Woolloomooloo (profession unstated), he was again declared insolvent. At the time of his third bankruptcy that September, he was working as a wood-carver. He lived at Manly where, his obituary noted, for several years his spare time had been occupied in designing and carving a large sandstone kangaroo set above the town on 'Kangaroo Hill’. Minus its ears ( see Thomas Newall ), this primitive animal survives.

C.P. Pickering died 13 September 1908 at his residence, Berowra, in James Street, Leichhardt, survived by his wife and seven children, including his photographer son Alfred . [It appears that photographer Alfred Pickering was not Charles son Alfred Henry (1851-1878) q.v. but his younger brother Alfred (1835-1935) and was sponsored to come to Australia in 1863 listed as a joiner]. Charles Percy was said to have been 'an old member of the Masonic craft, having joined the Lodge Woolloomooloo, Sydney, as far back as 1867’.

Writers:
Staff Writer
newtog
Date written:
1992
Last updated:
2024