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Lady Adelaide Chetwynd-Talbot, Countess Brownlow (1844-1917)

attributed to Annie Dixon (Horncastle 1817 - 1901)

Category

Art / Miniatures

Date

Unknown

Materials

Ceramic

Measurements

40 x 30 mm

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Collection

Belton House, Lincolnshire

NT 435975

Summary

Portrait miniature, watercolour on ivory, Lady Adelaide Chetwynd-Talbot, Countess Brownlow (1844-1917) attributed to Annie Dixon (Horncastle 1817 – 1901). Oval. circa 1910. Head and shoulders portrait of a yioung woman, facing, in a white dress with pearl borders. Blue eyes, black hair with centre parting, fresh complexion. Orange tree in background. Lady Adelaide Chetwynd-Talbot was born on 8 July 1844. She was the daughter of Henry John Chetwynd-Talbot, 18th Earl of Shrewsbury and Lady Sarah Elizabeth Beresford. She married Adelbert Wellington Brownlow Cust, 3rd Earl Brownlow (1844-1921), son of John Hume Egerton, Viscount Alford and Lady Marianne Margaret Compton, on 22 June 1868 at Ford Castle, Northumberland. She died on 16 March 1917 at age 72 at 8 Carlton House Terrace, London, England, after a long illness, without issue. Various descriptions of Lady Brownlow's appearance have survived; one, from Mrs Gladstone in 1875 of the Countess apparently wearing the dress seen in the Leighton portrait 436073: '...at teatime today in white embroidered with gold regular toga sort of thing, and tonight with red beads, white handkerchief on her head. Oh lovely." In 1893 Lady Paget described Lady Brownlow as the 'most beautiful of three sisters, every one of them the salt of the earth. She was seated between Lady Lothian and Lady Pembroke, the former in trailing black and the latter in trailing white draperies. Lady Brownlow was in sober grey of the same make, and they looked like the Three Fates. They all asked questions in high-pitched voices." * Lord and Lady Brownlow were considerable patrons of the arts; he was a trustee of the National Gallery and was responsible for commissioning George Frederic Watts to make a memorial statue to Tennyson in Lincoln; together they were patrons of the Home Arts and Industries Association, with which Mr and Mrs G F Watts, John Ruskin, William Morris and William de Morgan were also involved, and the object of which was to provide artistic work for the poor and disadvantaged. It was in one of their houses that Lord Charles Beresford coined the sobriquet ‘The Souls’, for the intellectual and aristocratic coterie amongst which they moved. Lady Brownlow died in 1917. * Both of these accounts of Lady Brownlow are quoted from Jane Abdy and Charlotte Gere's The Souls, 1984, pp 164-5.

Makers and roles

attributed to Annie Dixon (Horncastle 1817 - 1901), artist

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