Itâs very trendy right now to âdiscoverâ women artists. But how lost were they, really?
Mary Moser, c. 1770-71, George Romney, courtesy National Gallery
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Iâm in Edinburgh finishing a portrait this week. My subject bought me a copy of The Lady. This is one of Britainâs longest-running magazines. Founded in 1885, it was where the gentry advertised for domestic servants. Between the nanny ads and the horoscopes, there are some pieces of surprising interest, including a biography of 18th century painter Mary Moser.
Moser is best remembered for her decorative painting at Frogmore House, an English country house within the Home Park at Windsor. Started in 1680, it was largely renovated by Queen Charlotte, whom Americans know as the wife of King George III.
A Vase of Flowers, 1792-97, Mary Moser, Frogmore House, courtesy Royal Collection Trust
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But the Queen was much more than that. Among other things, she was a champion of women artists and a keen amateur botanist who helped expand Kew Gardens. It was this interest in botany that led to her hiring Moser to decorate the South Pavilion at Frogmore House.
The house was more than a century old when Queen Charlotte purchased it in 1792. She used it as a retreat from nearby Windsor Castle, where she and her daughters could practice their hobbies of âpainting, drawing, needlework, japanning, reading and âbotanisingâ.â The Queen had borne 15 children (13 of whom lived to adulthood) and had a mentally-ill husband, so itâs perhaps understandable that she then built another retreat within the gardens of this retreat. Thatâs Frogmore Cottage, where the Duke and Duchess of Sussex now live with their new baby.
Queen Charlotte, 1761, studio of Allan Ramsay
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Moser was already well-regarded as a floral painter when she took up the commission at Frogmore House. She had been trained by her father, an enamellist and himself a drawing tutor to George III. She was one of 36 artists who joined together to form the Royal Academy of Arts. At the age of 24, she was the youngest Academician and one of just two women among the founders. The other was Angelica Kauffman.
Moser did not marry until later in life. By convention, a womanâs professional life ended upon marriage. â[P]erhaps there was no man worth giving it all up for,â suggested The Lady.
Moser carried on an affair with miniaturist Richard Cosway. He was well-known as a libertine, and âcommonly described as resembling a monkey.â (His wife was, in turn, getting it on with Thomas Jefferson.) In his notebooks, Conway made lascivious comments and âinvidious comparisons between her and Mrs Cosway,â implying that Moser was more sexually responsive than his wife. He died insane, just in case youâre wondering if thereâs cosmic justice.
A Bunch of Flowers, 1792-97, Mary Moser, Frogmore House, courtesy Royal Collection Trust
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Moser married at age 49. Bowing to social pressure, she retired and began exhibiting as an amateur under her married name. Sheâd made a pile of money as a painter; the Frogmore commission alone earned her ÂŁ900, which is equivalent to ÂŁ100,000 today. She left most of her wealth to women: relatives, friends, and the wives of other artists.
Itâs very trendy right now to âdiscoverâ women artists. But how lost were they in the first place? Artemisia Gentileschi, for example, may not have been a household name twenty years ago, but was well-known to students of the Baroque.
The problem wasnât so much with their own times, but with the peculiar blinders of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Moserâs membership in the Royal Academy was circumscribed to some degree by her gender; she could not attend nude sketch sessions, for example, and some meetings were closed to her. But all in all, she had a happy and complete life as a painter.