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#226: By Aimee Ng, Curator Transcript

One of William Hogarth’s most significant patrons, Miss Mary Edwards was reputed to be one of the richest women in England when she commissioned Hogarth to paint this portrait. She had inherited her parents’ sizable estates when she was twenty-four. She married Lord Anne Hamilton in secret and had a son with him but repudiated the union after discovering that her husband had been lavishly spending her money.

Hogarth is perhaps best known for his satires of wealthy British society, but this presentation of Mary is earnest in its celebration of a confident, independent woman—a self-described spinster. Her broad, bright red dress seems to signal the force of her spirit. The text written on the paper next to her is a passage from Cato, a play by Joseph Addison, about protecting a nation’s rights and hard-earned freedoms. The popular play is said to have inspired the founding fathers of the United States of America. On the gold watch suspended from Mary’s waist, the tiny reflection of a window gives a sense of the interior space in which she sits majestically, with her dog at her side and her elbow resting on a small table with a globe. It is not known who the marble busts mounted on the wall behind her depict, though some believe they represent Queen Elizabeth I and King Alfred the Great. Mary died when she was thirty-eight, the year after this portrait was made.

Miss Mary Edwards

 (British, 1697–1764)
Date1742
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions49 3/4 × 39 7/8 in. (126.4 × 101.3 cm)
Credit LineHenry Clay Frick Bequest
Accession number1914.1.75
Commentary

Mary Edwards (1705–43), one of the richest women of her time, repudiated her marriage to an extravagant husband, although this was tantamount to declaring her son illegitimate. She was Hogarth’s friend and arguably his most significant patron during the decade 1733–43. The monumental portrait of Miss Edwards, wearing magnificent jewels and a striking red dress, is a masterpiece in the series of Hogarth’s commanding middle-class portraits, which includes the famous Captain Coram. The open scroll prominently displayed beside the subject champions the virtues of liberty and property that she would have appreciated as manager of a great fortune.

Source: Art in The Frick Collection: Paintings, Sculpture, Decorative Arts, New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1996.

Collection History

By family descent to W.F.N. Noel. Knoedler. Frick, 1914.

Source: Paintings in The Frick Collection: American, British, Dutch, Flemish and German. Volume I. New York: The Frick Collection, 1968.

Not On View
Oil painting of sitting woman wearing a gray and white dress
George Romney
1788
Oil painting of woman looking to side wearing white dress
George Romney
1780–83
Oil painting of boats on water
Joseph Mallord William Turner
1833
Oil painting of boats in rough water
Joseph Mallord William Turner
ca. 1803
Oil painting of harbor scene with boats and people
Joseph Mallord William Turner
exhibited 1825, but subsequently dated 1826
Oil painting of boat along the banks of a town
Joseph Mallord William Turner
1826
Oil painting of house with lawn, trees, and water
Joseph Mallord William Turner
1826
Oil painting of girl wearing white dress
Thomas Lawrence
after 1827
Oil painting of man wearing a black suit sitting at desk
Sir Henry Raeburn
ca. 1815
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