The precise details of Mary Beale's training remain obscure: her father John Craddock had been a member of the Painter-Stainers' Company, and had had his portrait painted by Robert Walker in the late 1640s. Walker was then pre-eminent among painters in London, particularly in the puritan circles that included Mary Beale's family, and it is, not unreasonably, supposed that Walker was her tutor in painting. In 1651 she married Charles Beale, a member of a prosperous family of Puritan gentry from Walton. Three years later their first son Bartholomew was born. Shortly afterward the painter and her family moved to Covent Garden, and began to associate with an erudite circle of artists, intellectuals and to clergymen that was to provide the base of her patronage in later years.
Initially, through his lucrative position at the Patent's Office, Charles was the main provider of the family's income. However, in 1665, with the Great Plague sweeping London and Charles losing his job, the Beales relocated from the city and took refuge at Albrook, a small village Hampshire. It was not until 1670, when she returned to London and their studio in Pall Mall, that she began her professional career in earnest. Our portrait, painted half-length set within a richly ornate faux cartouche surround, typical of the ‘Lelyesque’ design that was at the height of fashion at the time, probably dates from these first years in practice (this is further supported by the clothing and hairstyle). Sir Peter Lely (1618-1680), as Court Painter to Charles II and the most influential painter of the day, was an artist whom Mary and Charles both deeply admired. They worked hard to become acquainted with him and eventually succeeded in gaining the famous painter's friendship, support and encouragement. She and her sons had access to Lely’s fine collections, and she was permitted (no doubt a rare privilege) to observe him in the actual act of painting.
The style of portraiture which Peter Lely had made fashionable had been imitated by Mary in order to attract as wide a clientele as possible. Following his death in 1680 she continued to receive commissions for copies of his works, and made some attempt to keep abreast of current fashions, and this can be seen in her new and more relaxed postures, and she virtually abandoned the ornamental framing ovals which had characterised her head and shoulder portraits over the previous decade.
Traditionally, our portrait was thought to represent Louise de Kérouaille Duchess of Portsmouth, Charles II's favourite mistress, but the physiognomy of our sitter is incongruous with that of Louise de Kerouaille; the traditional assertion seems unlikely. The sitter bears a very striking resemblance to Catherine Sedley, Countess of Dorchester (1657-1717), Mistress of James II, wife of 1st Earl of Portmore, whom Lely painted circa 1675 - the same time as ours - and both sitters are about the same age.
The portrait is an exquisite example of Beale’s work at a time when she was producing some of her best work. Held in a fine period gilded frame.
Measurements: Height 83cm, Width 71cm framed (Height 32.5”, Width 28” framed)
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