 |
|
Miniature
Painting on Ivory
Small, finely wrought portrait executed on vellum, prepared card,
copper, or ivory. The name is derived from the minium, or red lead,
used by the medieval illuminators. Arising from a fusion of the
separate traditions of the illuminated manuscript and the medal,
miniature painting flourished from the beginning of the 16th century
down to the mid-19th century.
The portrait miniature, as a separate portrait enclosed in either a
locket or a covered "portrait box," is most plausibly traced to
Flemish illuminators such as those of the Horenbout family and
Bening family. The earliest datable portrait miniatures, however,
are not Flemish but French, and are all believed to have been
painted by Jean Clouet at the court of Francis I. Under the
patronage of King Henry VIII, Lucas Horenbout painted the first
portrait miniatures recorded in England. He taught the technique to
Hans Holbein the Younger, who was able to put into this small-scale
work all the intensity of vision and fineness of touch apparent in
his easel paintings and drawings, creating masterpieces of the
then-new art form that remain unsurpassed.
Holbein inspired a long tradition of miniature painting in England.
One of his pupils, Nicholas Hilliard, became the first native-born
master of miniature painting in that country. He adopted the oval
form, which had recently become fashionable on the continent of
Europe in preference to the circular form and which remained the
most popular shape until the early 19th century. Hilliard served as
miniature painter to Queen Elizabeth I for more than 30 years. His
chief pupil, Isaac Oliver, was a more technically sophisticated
artist who became the chief miniaturist during the reign of King
James I (1603-25). Oliver's pupil, Samuel Cooper, earned a
preeminent reputation in Europe by his presentation of character and
tight, effective brushwork.
Early miniaturists had painted in watercolour and gouache on vellum
or prepared paper. The technique of painting miniatures in enamel on
a metal surface was introduced in France in the 17th century and
perfected by Jean Petitot. About 1700 the Italian painter Rosalba
Carriera introduced the use of ivory as a ground that could provide
a luminous, glowing surface for transparent pigments and heighten
their effect. This technical innovation stimulated a great revival
of miniature painting in the second half of the 18th century. The
chief European miniaturists of the period were Peter Adolf Hall and
Niclas Lafrensen in France and Jeremiah Meyer, Richard Cosway, Ozias
Humphrey, and John Smart in England.
In the early 19th century, French miniaturists such as Jean-Baptiste
Isabey were influenced by the easel portraits of Jacques-Louis
David. Miniature portraits continued to be painted in the following
decades, but they remained an expensive luxury. Inexpensive
black-and-white portraits in the new medium of photography made
painted miniatures obsolete in the second half of the century.
Miniature painting—tiny watercolor on ivory portraits—thrived in
America during the early nineteenth century. Works in the
traditional, oval format rivaled innovative rectangular pieces as
artists vied to please clients who wished to wear and display these
intimate pieces. Indeed, most of the era's finest portraitists in
oil undertook miniature painting or hired an apprentice to do so.
Gilbert Stuart may have popularized this mode of commerce when he
arrived in New York in 1793 with the Irish miniature painter Walter
Robertson. They took sittings together for patrons eager for a
full-scale oil portrait, from Stuart, and a matching miniature from
Robertson.
In the succeeding years, the studio of John Wesley Jarvis became the
starting point for many young miniaturists. Joseph Wood joined
Jarvis' fold in 1803 and stayed until 1809; Wood soon thereafter
took the talented miniaturist Nathaniel Rogers as his apprentice. In
Wood's absence, Jarvis attracted Henry Inman into his fold, an
apprenticeship that lasted from 1814 to about 1821, until Inman took
on a student of his own, Thomas Seir Cummings. Inman and Cummings
enjoyed a very successful partnership, first because they painted
miniatures together and then because they were savvy enough to
eventually split the business: from 1827 on, Inman painted in oil
and Cummings in miniature.
By this time, miniaturists were striving to replicate the oil
portrait. Not only had miniatures become larger and more strongly
colored, but they also portrayed full-length figures and groups of
figures, and showed interior settings in elaborate detail. They
acquired a high finish and sharp focus, taking on the qualities of
their impending rival, the photograph. In fact, after the invention
of the daguerreotype in 1839, many miniaturists abandoned their art
as this new medium—featuring light on polished metal—attracted
clients away from the soft, fluid strokes required of watercolor on
ivory.
Some miniaturists colored photographs, some purchased the materials
required to produce both miniatures and daguerreotypes in their
studios. The two media shared casework: pocket-size leatherette
cases lined in velvet. But as photographic methods became more
popular and accessible, miniature painting became a lost art.
Carrie Rebora Barratt - Department of American Paintings and
Sculpture, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
[ Canadian School of Painting ] [ Cleaning Antique Paintings ] [ Impressionist Paintings ] [ Miniature Painting on Ivory ] [ Rene Brochard ] [ A. Meyer Bronze Sculpture ] [ Gertrude "Trudy" Doyle ] [ Tin-Yum Lau ] [ Narcisse Poirier ] [ Andrei M Zadorozny ] [ Art Market News ] |