John Maddox with a Cat
Summary
Full-length seated portrait of a young John Maddox witha white and ginger cat. The subject wears a blue and white striped gown upon white frilled drawers. He is seated on the ground and turned to the right; his left arm is raised with a pointed finger, and his right arm rests on the cat at his side. The background is a landscape of hills and trees, with flowers behind the child to the left.
Display Label
In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, children were usually dressed in miniature versions of adult dress, encumbered with heavy fabrics and formal styling, and then exhibited socially with their parents. During the eighteenth century, this tradition weakened, so that by 1800, children wore much looser and more practical outfits; girls in muslin or stout cotton frocks, and boys in linen or cotton skeleton suits and later woollen jackets and breeches. The Gallery has a good collection of nineteenth century children's clothing, particularly girl's dresses, a few examples of which are illustrated. Striped and patterned cottons were the usual material for such dresses, easily washable, and passed on from sibling to sibling, and then to cousins or friends. They were invariably home-made at this time, and often utilised fabric from worn adults' clothing, which could be cut up and re-used. During the nineteenth century, boys wore similar dresses to girls, until the age of 4 or 5, when they were "breeched" and put into little suits, like their fathers. The watercolour portrait shown below has a mother with her 3 children, both boys and girls in similar frocks or dresses, whilst the coloured fashion plate of about 1860 shows a gaggle of girls playing outdoor in replica versions of women's dress, complete with crinolines, but cut shorter to show the pantalettes below.
Object Name
John Maddox with a Cat
Creators Name
Date Created
1815-1825
Dimensions
unframed: 56cm x 45.2cm
accession number
1964.156
Collection Group
Place of creation
England
Support
canvas
Medium
oil paint
On Display
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