Portrait of Frances Teresa Stuart, Duchess of Richmond thumbnail 1
Portrait of Frances Teresa Stuart, Duchess of Richmond thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Portrait Miniatures, Room 90a, The International Music and Art Foundation Gallery

Portrait of Frances Teresa Stuart, Duchess of Richmond

Enamel Miniature
1669 (painted)
Artist/Maker

This portrait is painted in enamel on metal. The advantage of enamel over traditional miniature painting (watercolour painted on vellum or, from about 1700, on ivory) is that it does not fade when exposed to light. The process of painting with enamels is, however, less free than the miniature technique and is fraught with danger. The first colours to be laid on the metal support have to be those needing the highest temperature when firing. More colour is added and the enamel refired, the process ending with the colours needing the lowest temperature. Such labour meant that it was an expensive option.

This enamel is by Jean Petitot, a goldsmith and jeweller. Petitot and his friend, the enameller Jacques Bordier, together developed the art of painting portraits in enamel using a previously unexplored range of colours and subtlety of tone. Petitot introduced the court of Charles I in England to this novel art in the late 1630s. It is likely that he left England before the execution of his patron, Charles I, in 1649. Thereafter he practised in France, painting many portraits of Louis XIV, his children and those connected with his court.

The daughter of Walter Stuart, a physician in the household of Queen Henrietta Maria, Frances Stuart was two years old when Charles I was executed and she joined his widowed queen in exile in France. She returned to the restored court aged sixteen in 1660, a renowned beauty and thoroughly imbued with French taste. Her patronage of the French enamellist Petitot is indicative of this. This portrait, painted presumably in France in 1669 (it is signed and dated and inscribed with the sitter's name), anticipates the renewed interest of the English in the hard, bright, jewel-like technique of enamel painting. Within a decade the fashion for enamels rivalled the native tradition of miniatures painted in watercolour.

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read Portrait miniatures: other types of small portraiture Portrait miniatures first appeared in the 1520s at the courts of Henry VIII in England, and Francis I in France. These small portraits were painted in watercolour on vellum, and protected in lockets or small boxes, making it easy for them to be carried or even worn. The success of the port...

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitlePortrait of Frances Teresa Stuart, Duchess of Richmond (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Enamel on metal
Brief description
Portrait miniature of Frances Teresa Stewart, Duchess of Richmond and Lennox, dated 1669, enamel on metal, painted by Jean Petitot (1607-1691).
Physical description
Portrait miniature of Frances Teresa Stewart, Duchess of Richmond and Lennox, dated 1669, enamel on metal
Dimensions
  • Framed height: 8cm
  • Framed width: 7cm
Credit line
Purchased with funds from the Murray Bequest
Subjects depicted
Summary
This portrait is painted in enamel on metal. The advantage of enamel over traditional miniature painting (watercolour painted on vellum or, from about 1700, on ivory) is that it does not fade when exposed to light. The process of painting with enamels is, however, less free than the miniature technique and is fraught with danger. The first colours to be laid on the metal support have to be those needing the highest temperature when firing. More colour is added and the enamel refired, the process ending with the colours needing the lowest temperature. Such labour meant that it was an expensive option.

This enamel is by Jean Petitot, a goldsmith and jeweller. Petitot and his friend, the enameller Jacques Bordier, together developed the art of painting portraits in enamel using a previously unexplored range of colours and subtlety of tone. Petitot introduced the court of Charles I in England to this novel art in the late 1630s. It is likely that he left England before the execution of his patron, Charles I, in 1649. Thereafter he practised in France, painting many portraits of Louis XIV, his children and those connected with his court.

The daughter of Walter Stuart, a physician in the household of Queen Henrietta Maria, Frances Stuart was two years old when Charles I was executed and she joined his widowed queen in exile in France. She returned to the restored court aged sixteen in 1660, a renowned beauty and thoroughly imbued with French taste. Her patronage of the French enamellist Petitot is indicative of this. This portrait, painted presumably in France in 1669 (it is signed and dated and inscribed with the sitter's name), anticipates the renewed interest of the English in the hard, bright, jewel-like technique of enamel painting. Within a decade the fashion for enamels rivalled the native tradition of miniatures painted in watercolour.
Bibliographic reference
Victoria and Albert Museum, Department of Engraving, Illustration and Design & Department of Paintings, Accessions 1924, published under the Authority of the Board of Education, London, 1926.
Collection
Accession number
P.64-1924

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Record createdDecember 15, 1999
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