Enamel Miniature set in Diamonds Gervase Spencer, 1757 The Victoria & Albert Museum |
This miniature portrait is among those of the mid Eighteenth Century to mimic the look of watercolor on ivory by using enamels which would retain their color and integrity much longer. The technique of enamel painting was first perfected in the Seventeenth Century by goldsmiths such as Jean Petitot, but the widespread use of the medium for portrait miniatures really rose in popularity a century later. In order to create a miniature like this, many applications of enamel and multiple, carefully-times firings were required. Copper was usually the backing of choice.
This portrait of a now unknown man is the work of English miniaturist Gervase Spencer, a self-taught artist who had originally been a footman.
The miniature, dating to 1757, is luxuriously set with diamonds in a gold frame which has been curved so that it could be worn on the wrist on a ribbon.
2 comments:
I love this but I wish I knew who he was and what his story was. That's part of what I love about vintage pieces.
The mystery makes it all the more exciting.
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