Both Bartra and Rodriguez point out that Baquedano was mainly devoted to portrait. Rodríguez cites an announcement of National Photography that indicated the type of work done in this one: "photography on
platinum paper,
albumin,
silk,
porcelain, metal and everything that can be applied photographs. -
Illuminations on oil mirrors and
watercolor. - Portraits, views and groups outside the workshop. Conventional prices. Amplifications of all sizes, direct or taken from any portrait, however small, guaranteed the likeness." This document also announced a "Newness": the" photograph on natural flowers", an invention of Baquedano, which won her a celebrity, patenting it in her name and giving Carmen Romero Rubio de Diaz (wife of the Mexican President at the time) a bouquet of flowers with this ephemeral art. Rodriguez mentions that her work was "on the tone of his contemporaries". In his publication, there is one reproduction of one of Baquedano's studio photographs: a group portrait of the Founding Commission of the Astronomical Society of Mexico, c. 1900. Both Rodríguez and Bartra point out that, in addition to the individual or group portraits made in the Baquedano photographic studio, the artist also made some similar compositions to appearances "that seem taken from everyday life (the image of her parents, elegantly dressed, drinking beer), or merely theatrical (a child sitting on the Moon, another as an angel) and even playful compositions. She also made pictures of dead infants, something common at the time, but she would place the body next to a skull. According to Bartra, the Shanti Lesur Archive is composed almost entirely of portraits of the photographer's family, most notably the portraits of her sister Clemencia. Natalia Baquedano is an important source of the female portraits since she had a special predilection of portraying women. What it is outstanding in Baquedano's art is that she does not portrait female characters as it was usually done on her time. The
daguerreotypes,
nitrocellulose flexible film negatives, glass plates and paper prints, show a playful and not stigmatized universe. ==Scholarship on Natalia Baquedano and early women photographers in Mexico==