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Source Description
We do not know the identity of this elegantly dressed woman who plays a sonata on the harpsichord. There are two copies of this miniature that are attributed to other artists (Peter Adolphe Hall and Marie Christine Campana), and both identify the sitter as Sophie Arnould, a highly acclaimed French soprano. Dumont was fond of using objects in the space around the sitter to express her character—a common practice in portraits—so it is possible that this woman was a musician. To play a musical instrument well was considered an essential feminine accomplishment for an aristocratic woman during the eighteenth century, and like her fashionable dress, communicates the sitter's grace and charm to the viewer. This miniature was probably painted around 1788, on the eve of the French revolution, and the year that Sophie retired from the stage at the age of 48. Unknown sitters are oftentimes later identified as persons who were well-known or fashionable during the period when the work was painted, and it is difficult to know conclusively.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
121267
label
Portrait of a Woman at a Harpsichord
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
121267
contentType
object
title
Portrait of a Woman at a Harpsichord
description
We do not know the identity of this elegantly dressed woman who plays a sonata on the harpsichord. There are two copies of this miniature that are attributed to other artists (Peter Adolphe Hall and Marie Christine Campana), and both identify the sitter as Sophie Arnould, a highly acclaimed French soprano. Dumont was fond of using objects in the space around the sitter to express her character—a common practice in portraits—so it is possible that this woman was a musician. To play a musical instrument well was considered an essential feminine accomplishment for an aristocratic woman during the eighteenth century, and like her fashionable dress, communicates the sitter's grace and charm to the viewer. This miniature was probably painted around 1788, on the eve of the French revolution, and the year that Sophie retired from the stage at the age of 48. Unknown sitters are oftentimes later identified as persons who were well-known or fashionable during the period when the work was painted, and it is difficult to know conclusively.
date
c. 1788
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q80017050
creators
2568
genreSpecific
Portrait Miniature
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Diameter: 7.3 cm (2 7/8 in.); Diameter of frame: 9.3 cm (3 11/16 in.)
cul
France, 18th century
accession
1942.1139
Source extras
tec
watercolor on ivory in a 19th-century stamped gold and gilt metal frame
tombstone
Portrait of a Woman at a Harpsichord, c. 1788. François Dumont (French, 1751–1831). Watercolor on ivory in a 19th-century stamped gold and gilt metal frame; diameter: 7.3 cm (2 7/8 in.); diameter of frame: 9.3 cm (3 11/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, The Edward B. Greene Collection, 1942.1139
collection
P - French 18th Century
inscriptions
inscription
signed right: Dumont. fc
citations
citation
Cleveland Museum of Art. <em>Portrait Miniatures; The Edward B. Greene Collection.</em> Cleveland: The Cleveland Museum of Art, 1951.
page_number
Reproduced: plate XXVIII, no. 60; Mentioned: p. 34
creditline
The Edward B. Greene Collection
updatedAt
2026-05-29 06:14:47.530000
sourceId
121267
dept
European Painting and Sculpture
coll
P - French 18th Century
med
watercolor on ivory in a 19th-century stamped gold and gilt metal frame
creatorTags
male
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
8c38e03e3e11f67f