SAMUEL SHELLEY
(1750/56-1808)Portrait miniature of a Lady, standing by columns with red drapery, wearing a white dress with gold shawl draped over her arms
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Samuel Shelley was born in Whitechapel and remained a Londoner for the rest of his life, listing various London addresses when exhibiting and as inscriptions on his work – the present miniature, for example, is inscribed on the reverse with his address at 29 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden, London. He is said to have been largely self-taught before entering the Royal Academy Schools in 1774. Shelley exhibited at the Royal Academy between 1774 and 1804, including the present work which was included in the 1783 exhibition – as no. 341, ‘Portrait of a Lady’.
Shelley was a prolific and versatile artist, also producing watercolours and oil paintings, drawing book illustrations and engraving some of his own works. Scholar Basil Long describes him as ‘an amiable character who helped other artists’, and it is certainly the case that he taught miniaturists of the younger generation including Alexander Robertson (1772-1841) and Edward Nash (1778-1821).2 He also exhibited at the British Institution and Old Water Colour Society, of which he was a founder member.
In 1968, The Connoisseur published an image of this work as part of a piece on a singular private collection of portrait miniatures, where it sat beside another portrait of a lady by Shelley, and other miniatures, largely from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
As in the present example, many of Shelley’s female portraits show the sitter wearing a rope of pearls. In fact, the miniature that this sat alongside in The Connoisseur private collection also depicted a woman with pearls in her hair. It may be that this was a studio prop or an item of jewellery which belonged to the artist as such a large number of female sitters are depicted with a long string of pearls looped through their hair, draped about their decolletage, or held in their hands.
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