ENGLISH SCHOOL (19th Century)
A Lover’s Eye miniature, with blue iris
circa 1815
Watercolour on ivory (licence CNL1CQJG)
Teardrop shaped, 20 mm (3⁄4 in) high (with frame 45mm (1 3⁄4 in) high)
Set into a heart-shaped silver and gold locket, a gold engraved border set over blue glass with inner and outer seed pearl borders, surmounted by three further hearts set with seed pearls
SOLD
Eye miniatures were often at the centre of the great romances and affairs of the 18th and early 19th century. The ability to ‘hide in plain sight’ the identity of your loved one must have had great appeal in an age where double-standards were par for the course and marriages were built on money and status, not love. Eyes became the most intimate type of miniature – their identity known only to the wearer – set into brooches as with this example here. When an eye is separated from the rest of the face it becomes very difficult to ascertain the owner, and thus began a guessing game of wearing eyes – the identity known only to the wearer. These eyes are now known as ‘lover’s eyes’ – symbolising the secret nature of the most intimate of gifts.
The eye of Emma, Lady Hamilton (1765-1815), for example, was apparently presented to Lord Nelson (1758-1805) as he left for the Battle of Trafalgar.[2] When George, Prince of Wales, sent Maria Fitzherbert (1756-1837) his eye miniature, he wrote ‘I send you a Parcel. . . and I send you at the same time an Eye, if you have not totally forgotten the whole countenance. I think the likeness will strike you’, he began a fad for eye miniatures which quickly caught on in his circle of friends.
As Elle Shushan points out, eyes miniatures are difficult to categorise in art – they are a ‘hybrid, part portrait, part jewellery, part decoration’.[3] It is with extreme fascination that they are regarded today – still a mystery to untangle of a love story of the past.
[1] 48 See Elle Shushan’s chapter in ‘The Look of Love; Eye miniatures from the Skier Collection, 2012, Birmingham Museum of Art, p. 19, where she cites Ozias Humphry’s feebook of 1773 painting two eye miniatures for his patron the Duke of Dorset at Knole.
[2] Sold Bonhams, London, 5 July 2005, lot 145.
[3] Shushan Op. Cit., p. 27.
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