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Mary Frances (Fanny) Swinburne (d. 1828) was the eldest daughter of the travel writer Henry Swinburne. This portrait was painted around 1786, when Richard Cosway was reaching the mature stage of his career and was among the most sought after miniature painters in London. In this work the sitter’s hair is adorned with pearls—a style commonly seen in portraits of the period. She wears an earring in her right ear. Her bright blue eyes, rosy cheeks, and red lips are accentuated by her mass of curled, powdered hair and her pale skin and gown. This work is a classic example of Cosway’s elegant female portraits, exhibiting the nearly monochromatic palette and free style that would be so decisively rejected in the next century by such artists as Andrew Robertson (1777–1845) and William Charles Ross (1794–1860). The miniature is placed in a twentieth-century revival period gold and blue enamel frame with graduated split pearls. This ornate type of frame was especially popular among early-twentieth-century collectors who felt that it suited the grandeur of miniatures by Cosway and his circle, the female portraits of which were so often composed of the pale tones of gauzy dresses, blue skies, and pearl-ornamented hair.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
120828
label
Portrait of Mary Frances (Fanny) Swinburne
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
120828
contentType
object
title
Portrait of Mary Frances (Fanny) Swinburne
description
Mary Frances (Fanny) Swinburne (d. 1828) was the eldest daughter of the travel writer Henry Swinburne. This portrait was painted around 1786, when Richard Cosway was reaching the mature stage of his career and was among the most sought after miniature painters in London. In this work the sitter’s hair is adorned with pearls—a style commonly seen in portraits of the period. She wears an earring in her right ear. Her bright blue eyes, rosy cheeks, and red lips are accentuated by her mass of curled, powdered hair and her pale skin and gown. This work is a classic example of Cosway’s elegant female portraits, exhibiting the nearly monochromatic palette and free style that would be so decisively rejected in the next century by such artists as Andrew Robertson (1777–1845) and William Charles Ross (1794–1860). The miniature is placed in a twentieth-century revival period gold and blue enamel frame with graduated split pearls. This ornate type of frame was especially popular among early-twentieth-century collectors who felt that it suited the grandeur of miniatures by Cosway and his circle, the female portraits of which were so often composed of the pale tones of gauzy dresses, blue skies, and pearl-ornamented hair.
date
c. 1786
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q80016472
creators
3700
genreSpecific
Portrait Miniature
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Framed: 7 x 5.8 cm (2 3/4 x 2 5/16 in.); Sight: 6.8 x 5.7 cm (2 11/16 x 2 1/4 in.)
cul
England, 18th century
accession
1941.553
Source extras
tec
watercolor on ivory in a gold, enamel, and split pearl frame
tombstone
Portrait of Mary Frances (Fanny) Swinburne, c. 1786. Richard Cosway (British, 1742–1821). Watercolor on ivory in a gold, enamel, and split pearl frame; framed: 7 x 5.8 cm (2 3/4 x 2 5/16 in.); sight: 6.8 x 5.7 cm (2 11/16 x 2 1/4 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, The Edward B. Greene Collection, 1941.553
collection
P - British before 1800
didYouKnow
Richard Cosway painted Mary Frances’s parents, Henry and Martha, in the same year he painted this.
citations
citation
Rutherford, Emma. <em>Vellum, Paper and Ivory: Portraits and Portrait Miniatures 1550–1950. </em>London: The Limner Company, 2025. p. 54, no. 26.
citation
Winter, Carl. "The British School of Miniature Portrait Painters". <em>Proceedings of the British Academy</em> v. 34. London: Milford, 1948:.
page_number
Reproduced: pl. VII
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. 7; reproduced: pl. XVI
citation
Comstack, Helen. "The Edward B. Greene Collection of Miniatures." <em>The Connoisseur </em>128, no. 532 (October 1951): 137-144.
page_number
Mentioned: p. 139
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: p.86
citation
Korkow, Cory, and Jon L. Seydl. <em>British Portrait Miniatures: The Cleveland Museum of Art</em>. 2013.
page_number
Cat. no. 64, pp. 247-249
creditline
The Edward B. Greene Collection
updatedAt
2026-05-29 06:13:42.812000
sourceId
120828
dept
European Painting and Sculpture
coll
P - British before 1800
med
watercolor on ivory in a gold, enamel, and split pearl frame
creatorTags
male
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
8014a9f4b6b043d2