Date: Fri 14-Aug-1998
Date: Fri 14-Aug-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: LAURAB
Quick Words:
Miniatures
Full Text:
Beloved Keepsakes: Miniatures In The Collection Of Historic Hudson Valley
w/cuts
By Kathleen Eagen Johnson
SLEEPY HOLLOW, N.Y. -- Historic Hudson Valley's important collection of
miniatures reflects changing tastes and technologies from the 1780s to the
1920s.
Often dismissed by scholars and the art-viewing public as overly sentimental,
these small and complicated works currently enjoy renewed interest. Through
September 7, these tiny tokens of esteem may be seen at the Philipsburg Manor
Gallery in Sleepy Hollow.
Collection's Scope and Value
Historic Hudson Valley's assemblage of miniatures and related objects is
remarkable on several counts. The more than 20 artists whose identities are
known represent a variety of backgrounds, styles, skills and approaches.
Makers range from Richard Cosway (1742-1821), a premier English miniaturist of
international reputation, to unknown American artists laboring in a folk
style. Similarly, the levels of mastery run from what appears to be a valiant
attempt by novice Lewis Livingston (1798-1821) to a remarkable portrait by
prolific Anson Dickinson (1779-1852), whose technical facility allowed him to
create 1,500 miniatures during his career.
The work of a cadre of miniaturists' painting in New York and New England,
whose collective careers span the late Eighteenth to the mid-Nineteenth
Centuries, form the core of the collection.
Anson Dickinson, Thomas Seir Cummings (1804-1894), George Freeman
(1787/9-1868), Pamela Hill (1803-1860), John Ramage (c. 1748-1802), Nathaniel
Rogers (1787-1844), and Walter Robertson (c. 1750-1802) rank as highly
accomplished miniaturists.
Relatively few miniaturists signed their creations and so art historians rely
on other resources to attribute objects to makers. Preserved histories, a
particular strength of the collections of Historic Hudson Valley, aid in this
process.
For example, a miniature dating from the early 1790s, with its story of
star-crossed lovers, was treasured by successive generations of Van Cortlandts
residing in the Croton manor house. At Sunnyside, several portraits of
Washington Irving and his nieces and nephews remained in the family.
Members of the extended Montgomery/Livingston/Delafield family, who used their
property Montgomery Place as a country seat, not only commissioned miniatures
of themselves, but also assembled and catalogued similar likenesses of their
European and American predecessors. Violetta Delafield's ancestors, the Whites
and the Wetmores, form a large part of the Montgomery Place cache. These
families did not forget their forebears. Knowing the identities of the sitters
and makers, and understanding the family and personal associations that
miniatures commemorate, is a relatively rare happenstance. Documentation makes
the Historic Hudson Valley collection even more valuable.
The Miniaturist's Existence
While some artists worked as both miniaturists and canvas painters, the two
professions drew on different materials and artistic skills. The miniaturist,
working with materials that were more unruly than those employed by the canvas
painter, was also called upon to master a more exacting, and largely
irreversible, technique. Making a mistake often meant abandoning progress made
and starting over. In addition, miniatures required as much time to execute as
did larger works and, like paintings on canvas, usually required several
sessions on the part of the sitter. Considering the stresses placed on
miniaturists, it is no wonder that Washington Irving's friend George Harvey
suffered a nervous breakdown after working feverishly as a miniature painter
for a decade. He eventually gave up this most demanding vocation in order to
preserve his physical and mental health.
Many miniaturists led a vagabond's existence, in part due to artistic
temperament, but more often prompted by a constant and pressing search for
clients. John Ramage's career took him from Dublin to London, Halifax, Boston,
New York, and Montreal. Walter Robertson also hailed from Dublin and London.
In 1793, he accompanied his friend, the artist Gilbert Stuart, to New York,
worked there for two or three years, and then sailed for India. Based in
Connecticut, Anson Dickinson journeyed from South Carolina to Canada with
brush in hand. George Freeman, also from Connecticut, traveled back and forth
to Britain. Initially drawn there for further art instruction, Freeman secured
an appointment to paint Queen Victoria and Prince Albert from life, a
well-publicized achievement that assured a ceaseless flow of sitters on this
side of the Atlantic upon his return.
In order to survive, many miniaturists pursued alternative occupations. Some
assumed the role of art academician. Thomas Seir Cummings helped found the
National Academy of Design, where he served as a professor of drawing. John
Ramage was also a jeweler. Jean Francois de Vallâe (active 1785-1826), a
French âmigrâ who fashioned the earliest portrait of Andrew Jackson, came to
the United States with dreams of entering the cotton trade, but later worked
as a boarding house keeper.
European artists who had never set foot on this continent provided further
competition for miniaturists working here. Americans abroad took advantage of
their artful surroundings and returned with small-sized portraits in hand. On
an 1826 trip to Florence, Pierre Munro Irving, a nephew of the writer,
commissioned a portrait set in an artistic interior, an appropriate allusion
to that city.
Technique
Preparing materials was the first step in the creation of a miniature. By the
late Eighteenth Century, most miniaturists preferred an ivory base. They had
previously used, and on rare occasions continued to use, vellum. Ivory ovals
underwent a process by which they were leached of any grease, bleached and
polished. Miniaturists lightly but laboriously scored the ivory in order to
encourage the colors to cling to it.
Paper was attached to the reverse side to help this unstable material resist
warping and cracking, and to provide support for the ivory during the painting
process. Early on, ovals cut from playing cards were a favored backing because
of the card's relative thickness and stiffness. During the conservation
process, several miniatures in the collection of Historic Hudson Valley
yielded up supports that looked like the Queen of Hearts had been up to some
devilment.
Most early American miniaturists followed in the British tradition of
employing translucent colors when painting on ivory. By allowing the ivory to
show through wherever possible, they exploited its luminosity to create
glowing skin tones and fabrics. British and American miniaturists looked
askance at Continental European artists who, in contrast, preferred to cover
the ground with opaque colors and thus failed to take advantage of the visual
warmth of the ivory. Miniaturists working in this style added an opaquifer
such as gouache to watercolor. This "body color," as it is sometimes called,
is thicker and, as the Nineteenth Century progressed, became more widely
adopted in the United States.
As is the case with all artists, miniaturists developed their own style of
painting hair, facial features, clothing, and background. Because miniaturists
chose difficult materials to manipulate, they also had to acquire precise
techniques for scratching the ivory and applying colors. A mature artist's
pattern of cross-hatches, stipples, concentric lines and washes, discernible
through magnification, is distinctive and did not change radically from
portrait to portrait. Like the fingerprints that they resemble, these
identifiable patterns form a basis of attribution.
Creating a miniature was a labor of immense precision. Like many modern-day
technical manuals, treatises on miniature painting stressed the necessity of
working in a dust-free environment. Applying colors using tiny brushes
fashioned from sable hair or hairs plucked from the tip of a squirrel's tail,
miniaturists usually took advantage of optical aids such as magnifying glasses
to reduce eyestrain.
Format and Framing
The evolution of miniature shapes echoed the fashion for larger paintings.
Oval shapes predominated during the Eighteenth and early Nineteenth Centuries.
Rectangular formats were employed during the early to mid-Nineteenth Century.
Ironically, ivories grew relatively large as the century progressed. This
development was made possible by a machine that could create bigger pieces of
ivory by "unwrapping" the outer layer of a tusk and flattening it.
The preciousness of miniatures is underscored by the workmanship exhibited by
their cases, examples of the jeweler's art worthy of study in their own right.
Because the delicacy of a miniature's surface demanded protection, they were
covered by glass and then encased. Many of the earliest miniatures were framed
in cases of gold, gilded copper or pinchbeck, the last an alloy of copper and
zinc that was gilded to resemble gold.
Women adorned themselves with tiny remembrances of their loved ones mounted as
lockets and brooches or affixed to bracelets, a symbol of a "heart" literally
worn on one's sleeve. The reverse of the miniature case sometimes bore further
reference to the sitter in the form of an engraved name or monogram rendered
as an artful embellishment.
The inclusion of the sitter's hair encapsulated under glass on the verso
provided an intensely personal allusion. From a single curl to an elaborately
braided plait, a hair component underscored the extremely intimate and
individual nature of a miniature. Some miniaturists featured the sitter's hair
still more prominently.
Our Nineteenth Century ancestors avidly saved, labeled and stored away hair as
a tangible reminder of a time past. They even went so far as to employ it as a
medium for artistic expression in the form of jewelry and wreaths, the latter
composed of decoratively worked locks often garnered from a network of family
members and friends and framed under glass. In contemporary American culture,
with the exception of a baby's curls, hair cut from the body is generally
considered repulsive, a belief contrary to that held during the Nineteenth
Century. Today, hair is valued as a clue at a crime scene or as a biochemical,
genetic register awaiting scientific analysis. Hair has lost its sentimental
value. It is no longer the seat of the soul.
Not all miniatures were mounted as jewelry. During the Nineteenth Century,
some were set in wooden or gutta-percha frames and hung on the wall like oils
on canvas. More often, they were housed in leather cases and thus were
protected from light damage and from scratches. Bound like a book and held
together with brass hooks and eyes, this type of case, if square or
rectangular in format, could stand upright, much like a modern, foldable
photograph frame and was highly portable.
Mid- and late Nineteenth Century examples often had a decoratively cut velvet
interior facing to protect the glass covering the miniature. Some leather
cases from the turn of the Twentieth Century open to reveal a miniature
attached to a velvet-covered, bifold, collapsible stand that can be raised to
support the miniature in an upright position.
Miniature as Memorial
The scene of a woman contemplating a Classical monument served as a stock
design at the turn of the Nineteenth Century. Art historians mark the Swiss
Classicist Angelica Kauffman's painting "Fame Decorating the Tomb of
Shakespeare" of 1772 as the prototype for thousands of subsequent formula
pictures. Three miniatures in the Historic Hudson Valley collection each
represent a specific phase of that image's evolution. The first, by John
Ramage, honors the doomed love between a British soldier and Catherine
Clinton, the daughter of a Revolutionary War patriot. The nobility of a hero's
death is commemorated by a miniature dedicated to the late General Richard
Montgomery. A third miniature illustrates the use of this image to express
personal loss. As inscribed about the edge, this example commemorates the
death of 14-month-old Laura Sophia Wilcox in 1794.
Marking Life Passages
Miniatures memorialized the dead. They also marked notable points in the cycle
of life -- childhood, engagement and marriage, and old age. Like portraits
rendered in any medium, miniatures made an attempt to halt time. A number of
miniature portraits of children survive in the collection of Historic Hudson
Valley.
Companion portraits marked union through marriage. It is thought that paired
portraits of Anna Duer Irving (1807-1874) and Pierre Paris Irving (1806-1878)
were painted to commemorate their wedding in 1826. This date is suggested by
both the sitters' youth and by the portraits' oval shape, which characterized
the work of the artist Nathaniel Rogers until the mid-1820s.
Honoring a Great Person
The exemplary life was also celebrated through miniatures. Anson Dickinson's
depiction of weathered statesman Edward Livingston serves ably as a
quintessential portrait of a great man. This member of New York's powerful
Livingston clan led a life filled with accomplishment as well as heartache.
Early political successes included election to the House of Representatives
and to the mayoralty of New York. Disaster struck when the tax collector whom
he had appointed absconded with all the city's revenues for the year 1803.
His personal life was no less tumultuous. Between 1801 and 1821, he lost his
first wife and their three children to premature death. At the end of his
life, he spent time with his second wife, Louise, and daughter, Cora, at
Montgomery Place, a property he had inherited from his sister, Janet
Livingston Montgomery.
Anson Dickinson created two versions of this portrait, now in the collections
of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Historic Hudson Valley. In a day book
entry, Dickinson listed: "Washington City, February 3, 1827, Edward
Livingston, Esq." The Metropolitan Museum's version, supposedly the first,
portrays an awkwardly posed Livingston with his arm unnaturally manipulated
into the frame; an inkwell and quill rest nearby. A second version, owned by
Historic Hudson Valley, incorporates a more successful design.
The miniature of Edward Livingston, along with those of General Richard
Montgomery, Judge Robert R. Livingston and Emperor Napoleon, were proudly
displayed by subsequent owners of Montgomery Place who derived great personal
pride from the accomplishments of their illustrious ancestors and famous
associates. Within this stellar collection, an important miniature of Andrew
Jackson, Livingston's long-term political ally and friend, was particularly
prized.
Recognizing Political
Allegiance & Friendship
The earliest known portrait of Andrew Jackson, a gaunt young major general
with red hair and a coldly ambitious stare, represents two connotations
associated with miniature as gift. Jean Francois de Vallâe painted Jackson
soon after the general's January 8, 1815 victory over the British at New
Orleans, the battle that ended the War of 1812. Vallâe's Continental European
origins are apparent in his reliance on opaque colors and the rendering of
Jackson's notoriously bushy mane slicked down to form wispy bangs in the
French empire style. The image received wide distribution through an 1816
engraving attributed to ArsÅ ne LacarriÅ re, a New Orleans engineer and
architect, and an 1864 engraving by Alexander Hay Ritchie. Relatively early in
its history, the miniature was reframed along with the following inscription:
"Mr. E. Livingston is requested to accept this picture as a mark of the sense
I entertain of his public services, and as a token of my private friendship
and esteem. Headquarters N. Orleans. May 1st 1815. Andrew Jackson".
These sentiments meant a great deal to Livingston. The original note
accompanying the miniature had been lost and he requested Jackson to pen the
replacement copy seen here. The inscription reflects two aspects of miniature
presentation, the traditions of honoring political loyalty and of exchanging
tokens between friends.
The friendship between Jackson and Livingston was forged in New Orleans. They
had first met in Washington, D.C., while serving together in the House of
Representatives during the 1790s. They renewed their acquaintance 20 years
later when Jackson came to New Orleans to prepare for the defense of the city
against the British in 1814. Livingston, now an established leader in the
Louisiana Territory, served as Jackson's translator and later as his civilian
aide-de-camp. Their political alliance, and friendship, would last until
Livingston's death in 1836.
Photography and Miniatures
It has long been said that the invention of photography heralded the death of
the miniature, but the relationship was neither simple nor one-sided. In 1839,
William Henry Fox Talbot in England and Louis Daguerre in France perfected
their individual techniques (using light-sensitized paper and silver-coated
metal plate, respectively), shared them with the world, and began a revolution
in image-making.
Samuel F. B. Morse introduced the daguerreotype to the United States later in
1839. The daguerreotype was nicknamed "the mirror with a memory" because it
captured a reverse image upon a highly reflective base. Americans' joint love
affair with highly realistic art and sophisticated technology led to the
widespread adoption of the daguerreotype.
Painted and photographic portraiture remained integrally intertwined during
the Nineteenth Century. Early photographers, many of whom were painters,
relied on accepted artistic conceits when posing sitters. It is no coincidence
that Morse had also worked as a miniaturist.
Daguerreotypists enshrined their work in a manner originally reserved for
miniatures. Glass protected the delicate surface of the plate and was held in
place by a gilded metal liner. All components were contained within a
leather-covered case. When opening such a case today, one is never sure if one
will find a daguerreotype or a watercolor on ivory inside.
Since the Colonial period, Americans had sought a hard, realistic quality in
their portraits in marked contrast to the softer, more idealized portrayals
that European sitters requested. The popularization of photography prompted an
even more highly developed realism in painted portraits. In other words, the
power of the camera affected the visual aesthetic of the mid-Nineteenth
Century.
William J.H. Powell created an image of Washington Irving that he rendered in
nearly every medium, including watercolor on ivory. In the prospectus for the
lithographed version, he proudly alluded to the appropriation of the Brady
Studios daguerreotype of Irving because "as a likeness, [it] was perfect, the
genial character and peculiar play of the features being caught with
inimitable fidelity."
Hybrid images in the collection of Historic Hudson Valley illustrate the
interplay of brush and camera. Some early photographs received touches of hand
coloring. At times it was simply a pink blush added to the cheeks of the
sitter, but the application of even a hint of color suggested a painted
portrait.
At first glance, it appeared that the artist S. Schreier copied existing
photographs when he created miniatures of John Ross and Violetta Delafield and
their sons. Examination under a strong microscope as part of conservation
revealed a more complex story. Schreier printed a partial photographic image
onto a light-sensitized section of ivory, which he then over painted.
By the time the Delafields commissioned their portraits during the second
decade of the Twentieth Century, the miniature was largely obsolete. The
creation of these special portraits is a truer reflection of John Ross
Delafield's strong antiquarian interests rather than the flourishing of a once
highly popular art form. While the American Society of Miniature Painters
remained in existence from 1897 to 1965, in reality the battle against the
photograph had long been lost. Miniatures came to represent a quaint, bygone
era. The attributes they embodied were considered irrelevant, maudlin and
trite during the Twentieth Century's machine age and era of modernism.
"Beloved Keepsakes: Miniatures In The Collection Of Historic Hudson Valley" is
excerpted from the catalogue of the same name by Kathleen Eagen Johnson. It
may be purchased at Historic Hudson Valley's gift shop for $4.95.
Both exhibition and catalogue were made possible by grants from the Robert
Lehman and Henry Luce Foundations.
Philipsburg Manor is on Route 9 in Sleepy Hollow, N.Y. The museum is open
everyday except Tuesday from 10 am until 5 pm. Telephone 914/631-8200.