Martha Washington
This miniature, painted in 1801 by British-born artist Robert Field, is perhaps the most accurate record of Martha Washington's appearance in her final years. At the time, a visitor to Mount Vernon described it as a "striking likeness" that was "drawn to please her grand children in the usual long laced cap & neckkerchief [sic], that they may see her as she affected it in her every day face." Dressed in black with a dignified and serene countenance, she appears in mourning for her husband, who had died less than two years before.
Gilded copper case with double ring holder at top; blue glass reverse with fifty seed pearls surrounding a central bezel containing a lock of blond hair; underneath the blue glass is a layer of metal foil painted with white dots.
SignedRF/1801
Published ReferencesCarol Borchert Cadou, The George Washington Collection: Fine and Decorative Arts at Mount Vernon (New York: Hudson Hills, 2006), 243.
Harry Piers, Robert Field: An Exhibition Organized by the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (New York: Frederic Fairchild Sherman, 1927), 170.
Robert G. Stewart, "Portraits of George and Martha Washington." The Magazine Antiques, 135/2 (February 1989): 474-479.
William Armstrong, "Some New Washington Relics. I. From the Collection of Mrs. B.W. Kennon," The Century Magazine 40/1 (May 1890): 16-17.