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Unknown Lady
Hagbolt, Jacob, born 1775 - died 1849 - Enlarge image
Unknown Lady
- Object:
Relief
- Place of origin:
England, Great Britain (made)
- Date:
19th century (made)
- Artist/Maker:
Hagbolt, Jacob, born 1775 - died 1849 (maker)
- Materials and Techniques:
Wax
- Credit Line:
Rupert Gunnis Bequest
- Museum number:
A.95-1965
- Gallery location:
In Storage
During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, low relief portraits in wax became popular in Britain and they were often exhibited at the Royal Academy, the Society of Artists and elsewhere. Waxes were used in a similar way to prints and medals, in order to disseminate the image of the sitter, or, like miniature paintings or silhouettes as portable mementoes.
The popularity of wax portraits was in part driven by their links with other types of portrait manufacture such as ceramic medallions.
The process of making a portrait in wax would begin with a model in plasticine or soft wax which would be worked using ivory or wooden tools in much the same way as a model in clay. A plaster mould would then be made and molten wax poured into it. The relief would then be hand-finished by the artist.

