Bust Length Portrait of a Young Woman with a Flowered Headdress

Unknown British, British

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about 1770-1775

Watercolor on ivory

Image: 13/16 × 11/16 in. (2 × 1.8 cm)

Overall: 1 7/16 × 11/16 in. (3.6 × 1.8 cm)

Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth: The Jean Frank Hamann Collection; Gift of her Children, David Frank, Lori Weinrott, Nina Frank, Ted Frank, and Sally Frank

2024.77.16

Geography

Place Made: England, Europe

Period

18th century

Object Name

Painting

Research Area

Painting

Not on view

Inscriptions

Unsigned

Label

Portrait miniatures were popular keepsakes from about the 16th century onward. Intimate representations of individuals or families, these portraits could be given as tokens of affection, friendship, or commemoration and worn as jewelry or kept safely in boxes. Artists’ use of high-status materials such as tortoise shell, ivory, silver, and enamel complemented the preciousness of these representations. Organic supports and water-based pigments are especially susceptible to light damage from UV rays, an attribute to these paintings already recognized even in the early modern period. Many miniatures accordingly had their own cases to protect the colors from fading.

From the 2025 exhibition Animal, Vegetable, Mineral: Making Colors in Europe, 1400–1800, curated by Elizabeth Rice Mattison, Andrew W. Mellon Curator of Academic Programming and Curator of European Art

Exhibition History

Animal, Vegetable, Mineral: Making Colors in Europe, 1400–1800, Harrington Gallery, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, September 6 - Fall 2026.

Provenance

Purchased by Jean Frank Hamann (1933-2023), Philadelphia, PA; bequeathed to her children David Frank, Lori Winrott, Nina Frank, Ted Frank, and Sally Frank; by whom given to the present collection, 2024

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