-
1 of 253523 objects
William Charles Bell (1831-1904)
Princess Louise, later Marchioness of Lorne & Duchess of Argyll (1848-1939), as a child 1850-51
RCIN 421655

William Charles Bell (1831-1904)
Princess Louise, later Marchioness of Lorne & Duchess of Argyll (1848-1939), as a child 1850-51
-
William Charles Bell trained as an enamel painter in Geneva before securing his first royal commission in March 1850. From then onwards, he was employed constantly by Queen Victoria for almost 50 years, painting enamel miniatures, often copied after Franz Xaver Winterhalter's oil portraits, for her own collection and for distribution as gifts. His enamels were usually smaller than those by Henry Pierce Bone, William Essex or John Simpson, whose services she had previously employed, and many were set into items of jewellery, particularly Maid of Honour brooches. Queen Victoria's last payment to Bell, in July 1899, was for '6 Miniatures on Gold for Maid of Honour brooches'. Owing to his advanced years, the Queen then gave him no further work but awarded him an annual pension of £20.
Bell's copy is based on Sir William Ross's miniature painted in 1850 (420313). Two other versions by Bell are also in the Royal Collection (422035; 421887).
Signed and inscribed on the counter-enamel in black paint by the artist: H.R.H. / the / Princess Louise / b: March 18, 1848 / W. C. Bell / after Sir Willm Ross / 1850.Provenance
Purchased by Queen Victoria
-
Creator(s)
-
Category
Object type(s)
-
Other number(s)