Elizabeth Parke Custis
This charming miniature of Elizabeth Parke Custis, the eldest granddaughter of Martha Washington, was painted in 1814 by renowned artist James Peale. By 1814, the sitter had been separated for ten years and divorced for three years from her husband Thomas Law, whom she had married in 1795. We know from her letters of 1814 that she was having her portrait painted in miniature for the Chevalier de Greffe, a French military officer to whom she was apparently engaged. The two never married, as de Greffe returned home to France to recover his property and was never heard from again. Mount Vernon’s collection also includes an important James Peale miniature of Martha Washington, which is believed to have been made for Elizabeth Parke Custis’ sister, Eleanor.
The background is hatched overall in varying pigments of warm brown.
The miniature was framed in a wooden (or papier-mache?) frame, painted black, with a brass hanging ring and decorative floral mount. It is presently separated from its framing elements. A torn and fragmentary label identifying the portrait is mounted on the reverse of the frame.
SignedIncised or scratched at proper right, in the background to the proper right of the sitter’s shoulder:
“IP /1814“
Published ReferencesLillian B. Miller, ed., The Peale family: Creation of a Legacy, 1770-1870 (New York: Abbeville Press, 1996), 203-219. (General Reference.)
Christie’s, New York, Sale of Important American Furniture, Silver, Prints, Folk Art and Decorative Arts, 18 January 1992: Lot 454, page 182.