Kate Middleton uses first V&A visit since becoming patron to unveil museum's photography centre

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Kate Middleton has used her first visit to London’s Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) since becoming a patron to officially open its new photography centre and exhibition.

The Duchess of Cambridge, who studied art history, was given a tour of the exhibition at the design museum after meeting the curators on Wednesday evening.

Kate, who became the museum’s first royal patron in March, showed her expertise in the field during the visit, the senior curator of the exhibition Martin Barnes said.

He said: "She is a really knowledgeable student in art history, so she understood about the technology behind the photos. I really got a sense of her knowledge and interest in how it is relevant today but how its history informs its present."

The Duchess of Cambridge leaving after opening the new photography centre at the Victoria and Albert Museum
PA

Displays in the new centre, the first phase of which more than doubles the amount of space in the museum dedicated to photography, will be drawn from the London museum's collection of more than 800,000 photographs.

More gallery space is set to be given over to photography in the museum by 2022.

The first exhibition to be held in the centre - called Collecting Photography: From Daguerreotype to Digital - showcases photos taken from the 19th century, when the medium was first invented, up to the present day.

Kate opened the photography centre on Wednesday night
Getty Images

Tristram Hunt, the former Labour MP who is now the director of the V&A, said: "Our new photography centre provides a world-class facility to re-establish photography as one of our defining collections.

"In an era when everyone's iPhone makes them a photographer, the V&A's photography centre explores and explains the medium in a compelling new way."

He also thanked the gallery's "Kensington neighbour" the Duchess of Cambridge for unveiling the official plaque.

Visitors entering the new photography centre will pass a display of more than 150 cameras spanning 160 years.

The exhibition opens to the public on Friday and entrance is free.

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