Jane Baillie Welsh, Mrs Thomas Carlyle, 1801 - 1866. Wife of the historian Thomas Carlyle
About this artwork
This lively watercolour was made shortly before Jane Welsh married Thomas Carlyle in 1826. During the forty years of their marriage, they both loved and frustrated each other. Beautiful and brilliant – she was nicknamed ‘the flower of Haddington’ – Jane employed her gifts mainly in letter writing rather than published work. After her death in 1866, Carlyle wrote ' I have no Portrait of my lost Darling; nothing but a Miniature (taken by Macleay shortly before our marriage); it has the fine sunny smile of her face, but wants the sharp delicacy of featuring'. Just four years earlier Jane had mentioned this picture in a letter, describing it as 'a memorial of the three happiest weeks I have lived for a long time'.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Kenneth MacLeayScottish (1802 - 1878)
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title:Jane Baillie Welsh, Mrs Thomas Carlyle, 1801 - 1866. Wife of the historian Thomas Carlyle
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date created:1826
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materials:Watercolour on ivory
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measurements:9.50 x 7.60 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Presented by Alexander Carlyle 1930
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accession number:PG 1123
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subject:
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artwork photographed by:Antonia Reeve
Kenneth MacLeay
Kenneth MacLeay
Macleay was born in Oban on the west coast of Scotland. The son of a surgeon, he was already producing competent miniatures on ivory when he entered the Trustees' Academy in Edinburgh in 1822. Within a year he had set up in business as a portrait painter and by 1830 he was the leading miniaturist...