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Source Description

This sensitive portrait of Catherine Clemens and her son, John Marcus, was painted around 1800 and exemplifies the prettiness for which Cosway was so well known. The artist’s trademark turquoise blue sky is reflected in the boy’s brilliant blue eyes and the bow on the frock that slips informally off his shoulder. This miniature also showcases Cosway’s mature technique of delicate stipplework throughout the faces, contrasted with looser brushstrokes for the hair and garments. Both John Marcus and his mother are swathed in white ruffled fabric, against which the paleness of their skin seems even more pronounced. Like his contemporaries, Cosway used the bare ivory ground to enhance the creaminess of flesh tones. John Marcus wears a coral necklace, frequently given to children during this period as a talisman believed to ward off illness. His innocent, childish gesture of reaching down his mother’s dress for her breast is awkward considering his disproportionately large size. The fact that he is still young enough to wear a gown rather than breeches suggests that he is under four years old, and yet his head and lips are larger than his mother’s. During the final decades of the eighteenth century, aristocratic women as prominent as the Duchess of Devonshire were electing to breastfeed their children rather than send them to wet nurses, and this may be a delicate reference to Catherine Clemens’s philosophy of “natural” parenting.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
120827
label
Portrait of Catherine Clemens and Her Son, John Marcus Clemens
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
120827
contentType
object
title
Portrait of Catherine Clemens and Her Son, John Marcus Clemens
description
This sensitive portrait of Catherine Clemens and her son, John Marcus, was painted around 1800 and exemplifies the prettiness for which Cosway was so well known. The artist’s trademark turquoise blue sky is reflected in the boy’s brilliant blue eyes and the bow on the frock that slips informally off his shoulder. This miniature also showcases Cosway’s mature technique of delicate stipplework throughout the faces, contrasted with looser brushstrokes for the hair and garments. Both John Marcus and his mother are swathed in white ruffled fabric, against which the paleness of their skin seems even more pronounced. Like his contemporaries, Cosway used the bare ivory ground to enhance the creaminess of flesh tones. John Marcus wears a coral necklace, frequently given to children during this period as a talisman believed to ward off illness. His innocent, childish gesture of reaching down his mother’s dress for her breast is awkward considering his disproportionately large size. The fact that he is still young enough to wear a gown rather than breeches suggests that he is under four years old, and yet his head and lips are larger than his mother’s. During the final decades of the eighteenth century, aristocratic women as prominent as the Duchess of Devonshire were electing to breastfeed their children rather than send them to wet nurses, and this may be a delicate reference to Catherine Clemens’s philosophy of “natural” parenting.
date
c. 1800
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q80016471
creators
3700
genreSpecific
Portrait Miniature
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Framed: 9 x 7.3 cm (3 9/16 x 2 7/8 in.); Sight: 8 x 6.1 cm (3 1/8 x 2 3/8 in.)
cul
England, 19th century
accession
1941.552
Source extras
tec
watercolor on ivory in a gold and split pearl frame
tombstone
Portrait of Catherine Clemens and Her Son, John Marcus Clemens, c. 1800. Richard Cosway (British, 1742–1821). Watercolor on ivory in a gold and split pearl frame; framed: 9 x 7.3 cm (3 9/16 x 2 7/8 in.); sight: 8 x 6.1 cm (3 1/8 x 2 3/8 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, The Edward B. Greene Collection, 1941.552
collection
Mod Euro - Painting 1800-1960
didYouKnow
Portraits of mothers with their children were much more common in the 1700s and 1800s in Britain than were portraits of fathers with their children.
citations
citation
<em>Think </em>(International Business Machines Corp.) (March 1950).
page_number
16 (repr.)
citation
Cleveland Museum of Art. <em>Portrait Miniatures; The Edward B. Greene Collection</em>. Cleveland: The Cleveland Museum of Art, 1951.
page_number
Mentioned: p. 26, no. 8; reproduced: pl. VI, no. 8, cover
citation
Comstack, Helen. "The Edward B. Greene Collection of Miniatures." <em>The Connoisseur </em>128, no. 532 (October 1951): 137-144.
page_number
Mentioned and reproduced: p. 138
citation
Lister, Raymond. “Edward B. Greene Collection of Portrait Miniatures.” <em>Apollo: The International Magazine for Collectors</em> 55 (January 1952): 20.
page_number
Mentioned: p. 20; reproduced: cover
citation
Geneva (Switzerland). <em>Chefs-d'oeuvre de la miniature et de la gouache</em>. Genèva: Le Musée, 1956.
page_number
Mentioned and Reproduced: cat. no. 99
citation
"Masterpieces of Miniatures and Gouache." <em>The Connoisseur </em>138 (October 1956): 82-83.
page_number
Mentioned and reproduced: p. 82-83
citation
Cleveland Museum of Art, and Alan Chong.<em> European &amp; American Painting in the Cleveland Museum of Art: A Summary Catalogue</em>. Cleveland, Ohio: Cleveland Museum of Art, 1993.
page_number
p. 282
citation
Korkow, Cory, and Dario Robleto.<em> Disembodied: Portrait Miniatures and Their Contemporary Relatives</em>. 2013.
page_number
Mentioned and Reproduced: p.35, 86, 69
citation
Korkow, Cory, and Jon L. Seydl.<em> British Portrait Miniatures: The Cleveland Museum of Art. </em>2013.
page_number
Cat. no. 67, pp. 255-257
citation
Cleveland Museum of Art. <em>The CMA Companion: A Guide to the Cleveland Museum of Art</em>. Cleveland: Cleveland Museum of Art, 2014.
page_number
Mentioned and reproduced: P. 197
creditline
The Edward B. Greene Collection
updatedAt
2026-05-29 06:13:45.644000
sourceId
120827
dept
Modern European Painting and Sculpture
coll
Mod Euro - Painting 1800-1960
med
watercolor on ivory in a gold and split pearl frame
creatorTags
male
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
9e4bea9264fc7225