Enamel portrait miniature of Lady Arabella Fermor thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Portrait Miniatures, Room 90a, The International Music and Art Foundation Gallery

Enamel portrait miniature of Lady Arabella Fermor

Enamel Miniature
1716 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Quarter length enamel portrait miniature of Arabella Fermor in a blue dress. Signed and dated by the artist.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleEnamel portrait miniature of Lady Arabella Fermor (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Enamel portrait miniature
Brief description
Enamel portrait miniature of Lady Arabella Fermor, signed and dated, by Christian Friedrich Zincke. Anglo-German, 1716.
Physical description
Quarter length enamel portrait miniature of Arabella Fermor in a blue dress. Signed and dated by the artist.
Marks and inscriptions
C. F. Zincke 1716 (Signed and dated)
Object history
Miss Arabella Fermor was the daughter of Henry Fermor Esq. of Tusmore in Oxfordshire. The fame of her beauty and her charms, as celebrated both by poets and painters, has come down to posterity, for she was the belle of London society in the early years of the 18th century.
There are three known portraits of her. Mary Russell Mitford describes one thus:

"Mrs. Lenoir's nieces possess a portrait of the lovely Arabella Fermor, when she was twelve or thirteen years of age . . . a high broad forehead, dark eyes richly fringed and deeply set, a straight nose, pouting lips, and a short chin finely moulded. The dress is dark and graceful, with a little white turned back about the neck and loose sleeves".

The next, chronologically, seems to have been painted soon after her marriage (see illustration) and is one of a pair, with the other being of her husband. She is depicted as young and very charming; two long curling locks resting on her shoulders.
The third portrait formed part of the collection of Mr. Hartley of Bucklebury House (Berkshire) and is said to be by Sir Godfrey Kneller. It is of a woman in the prime of her beauty and grace; the pose is very elegant, and the colouring charming; in it she still wears the fashionable love-lock of the day. All three have much individuality and many points of resemblance.
The now not much read poet, Parnell, sings of the dismay of the "jeunesse dorée" of the time when this fascinating lady left London for the country in the Summer:

From town fair Arabella flies;
The beaux, unpowdered, grieve;
The rivers play before her eyes,
The breezes softly breathing rise,
The spring begins to live....etc

But in spite of the admiration of the world of fashion, which she no doubt enjoyed in her lifetime, it is probable that the lady would not have been remembered had she not become the inspiration for the most successful of all Alexander Pope's poetical works, 'The Rape of the Lock'. The incident which suggested its composition was an indiscretion of which Lord Petre, a young man of twenty, had been guilty. Unbeknown to the fair lady, he had cut off and stolen a lock of her hair. She was very angry and a serious quarrel took place between the two families. Whereupon, Pope's friend, John Caryll of Lady Holt (Sussex), proposed that he should write something slight and amusing on the subject, in the hopes that good-natured humour might appease the ill-feeling that had been excited.

The poem was in every way suited for its purpose. Unfortunately, however, Pope, was not personally acquainted with Mistress Arabella and he published his work without asking her leave. Moreover, he appended to it a motto, which was taken by her friends to imply that she had asked him to compose the poem. Instead of mending matters, he, therefore, only made them worse, drawing another quarrel upon himself. In consequence, Pope was obliged to bring out another edition, suppressing the objectionable motto and prefixing a propitiatory letter of dedication instead. In this, he assured Arabella that the incidents of the poem were all "as fabulous as the vision at the beginning, except the loss of your hair, which I always mention with reverence; . . . the character of Belinda as it is now managed resembles you in nothing but beauty....It will be vain to deny that I have some regard for this piece since I dedicate it to you....If it had as many graces as there are in your Person or in your Mind; yet I could never hope it should pass through the world half so uncensured as you have done." The lady seems to have been pacified and, perhaps, even accorded Pope her friendship.

In 1715, at the height of Arabella's fame, a Berkshire gentleman, Francis Perkins of Ufton Court, won her hand in marriage. The two were actually 9th cousins, but it is unlikely that they were aware of the relationship. For the wedding, Pope wrote her an almost affectionate letter. He says, "It may be expected, perhaps, that one who has the title of poet should say something more polite on this occasion, but I am, really, more a well-wisher to your felicity than a celebrator of your beauty. Besides, you are now a married woman, & in a way to be a great many better things than a fine lady, such as an excellent wife, a faithful friend, a tender parent, & at last, as the consequence of them all, a saint in heaven."

Arabella bore to her husband one daughter, also named Arabella, who died in childhood, and five sons. Francis Perkins died in 1736, leaving his wife £52-10s for her support, but Arabella only survived him by a year.

Subject depicted
Association
Bibliographic reference
Summary Catalogue of Miniatures in the Victoria and Albert Museum, Haslemere: Emmett Microform, 1981
Collection
Accession number
P.106-1922

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
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