Portrait miniature of Lieutenant Thomas Harriott thumbnail 1
Portrait miniature of Lieutenant Thomas Harriott 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 miniature of Lieutenant Thomas Harriott

Portrait Miniature
1791 (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This miniature of Lt Thomas Harriot, the artist's second husband, was painted by Diana Hill (maiden name Dietz, 1760-1844), a British miniature painter who lived and worked in Kolkata between 1786 and 1806. Hill was part of a group of portrait painters who travelled to India in pursuit of more commissions and artistic acclaim, such as John Smart and Ozias Humphry. As a woman artist, Hill’s position was more contested than that of her contemporaries in India. In a telling display of his prejudice, Humphry proclaimed that he would ‘rather have had all the male painters in England landed in Bengal than a single woman.’ Hill nonetheless persisted and built a successful portrait practice amongst the city’s colonial elite. It appears the artist stopped painting professionally after her second marriage: this miniature of her second husband may be one of her last works.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitlePortrait miniature of Lieutenant Thomas Harriott (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Watercolour on ivory
Brief description
Portrait Miniature, Lt Thomas Harriott, by Diana Hill, watercolour on ivory, 1791.
Physical description
Oval portrait miniature on ivory of a man, Lieutenant Thomas Harriott, wearing his military uniform. The miniature is monogrammed and dated by the artist and set in a metal frame. On the reverse are the initials of the sitter with hairwork.
Dimensions
  • Height: 48mm
  • Width: 33mm
Dimensions taken from Summary Catalogue of Miniatures in the Victoria and Albert Museum, Emmett Microform, 1981.
Marks and inscriptions
D. H. 1791 (Signed with monogram and dated centre right)
Historical context
Portrait miniatures were frequently exchanged between loved ones and family in eighteenth-century Britain as tokens of affection and remembrance. In colonial India, where many officers were separated from loved ones for long periods of time, there was a high demand for portraits that could be sent to friends and family back home; or that could document and preserve one’s own likeness. Hill painted the portraits of many central figures of the British community in Kolkata. This portrait miniature depicts the artist’s second husband.
Subjects depicted
Summary
This miniature of Lt Thomas Harriot, the artist's second husband, was painted by Diana Hill (maiden name Dietz, 1760-1844), a British miniature painter who lived and worked in Kolkata between 1786 and 1806. Hill was part of a group of portrait painters who travelled to India in pursuit of more commissions and artistic acclaim, such as John Smart and Ozias Humphry. As a woman artist, Hill’s position was more contested than that of her contemporaries in India. In a telling display of his prejudice, Humphry proclaimed that he would ‘rather have had all the male painters in England landed in Bengal than a single woman.’ Hill nonetheless persisted and built a successful portrait practice amongst the city’s colonial elite. It appears the artist stopped painting professionally after her second marriage: this miniature of her second husband may be one of her last works.
Bibliographic reference
Summary Catalogue of Miniatures in the Victoria and Albert Museum, Emmett Microform, 1981 M. Archer, India and British Portraiture 1770-1825 (Sotheby’s Publications, 1979) W. Foster, ‘British artists in India, 1760–1820’, Walpole Society, 19 (1930–31), 1–88, p. 40
Collection
Accession number
P.126-1920

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
Record URL
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