
The Duchess of Berry
Thomas Lawrence·1825
Historical Context
Lawrence painted the Duchess of Berry around 1825, depicting the widowed daughter-in-law of the French King Charles X, whose husband the Duke of Berry had been assassinated in 1820. The Duchess, born Princess Caroline of Naples and Sicily, became a heroic figure to French royalists for her spirited defense of her son's dynastic rights after the 1830 July Revolution. Lawrence's portrait captures her vivacious personality and the defiant charm that endeared her to the legitimist cause. Now in the Museum of the History of France at Versailles, the painting documents the Bourbon monarchy in its final years before the revolution that ended the old regime permanently.
Technical Analysis
Lawrence's portrait presents the Duchess with characteristic elegance and warmth. The luminous treatment of the complexion and the shimmering rendering of her dress demonstrate Lawrence's mastery of fashionable female portraiture.
Look Closer
- ◆Notice the luminous complexion and shimmering dress: Lawrence lavishes his most brilliant female technique on the Duchess's famous vivacity.
- ◆Look at the fashionable Bourbon court dress rendered with Lawrence's virtuosic handling of luxury fabric.
- ◆Observe the vivacious expression: the Duchess's defiant charm is captured with the psychological warmth Lawrence brought to his most admired female sitters.
- ◆Find the Versailles location: the portrait of the last great Bourbon princess now hangs in the palace of French royal history.
See It In Person
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Anna Maria Dashwood, later Marchioness of Ely
Thomas Lawrence·c. 1805
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Elizabeth Farren (born about 1759, died 1829), Later Countess of Derby
Thomas Lawrence·1790
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The Calmady Children (Emily, 1818–?1906, and Laura Anne, 1820–1894)
Thomas Lawrence·1823

Portrait of the Honorable George Canning, M.P.
Thomas Lawrence·c. 1822



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