Featured Portrait Minature

Discussion in 'Art' started by Desertau, May 25, 2024.

  1. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    I don’t know very much about this portrait miniature done on vellum other than it came from my grandfather through his business and the obvious things visible in these photographs.
    IMG_2024-05-25-121400.jpeg IMG_2024-05-25-121436.jpeg IMG_2024-05-25-121510.jpeg IMG_2024-05-25-122016.png
     
  2. Roaring20s

    Roaring20s Well-Known Member

  3. Roaring20s

    Roaring20s Well-Known Member

    Hard to tell, but the shadowing has the appearance of being printed. Maybe it was enhanced with painted elements?

    More striking than others seen while searching. I like it.
     
    Desertau likes this.
  4. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    I think taking a phone picture then reducing the size has flattened and softened the image, but out of curiosity when was color printing of this type available? This was collected prior to 1950 it is on vellum could this have even been printed other than some stone type of lithography?
     
  5. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    I pulled it apart and the vellum if I am accurate calling it that is fine grained hard material, stiff, slightly translucent I would almost guess ivory except I’d expect ivory to be more opaque. Looking at the backside the color appears layered as you would building up color with layers by painting although I suppose certain types of printing are also layered?

    so I don’t know, I never thought printed and enhanced but these things were mass produced at some point in time while in favor I have to imagine… perhaps then a department store Victorian knockoff?
    Front side
    IMG_2024-05-25-223054.jpeg
    back side
    IMG_1801.jpeg
     
  6. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    Found this,


    When did color printing become common?


    The introduction of offset lithography in the 1940s brought color printing into the mainstream. Process color combined cyan, magenta, yellow, and black inks to create a spectrum of color using only 4 printing plates. The CMYK process is still around and offset printing is a great solution for long print runs.

    so, I guess it could be printed and enhanced?
     
  7. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    It's decorative, not fine art, and like the others may be a reproduction of a known (at one time) work. Perhaps the surface is celluloid?

    Debora
     
  8. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    I’m inclined to believe this is a reproduction of some other work mass produced for the average consumer the similarities in the frames is compelling.

    Somewhat confusing for me I do recall taking a number of items to an Antiques road show sometime around 2005 this was in the mix, nothing was remarkable but as I recall the miniature passed inspection? It may simply be as the masses flow through the arena by the thousands parading our treasures it could be a bit numbing and not everything gets closely inspected?
     
  9. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    The writing on the label on the back of the frame, and the ink used, appear to date from earlier than the 20th century. That's all I've got.
     
    Lucille.b and Desertau like this.
  10. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    Perhaps written by an older hand which IMHO can't be used as a trie indication of the piece's age.

    Debora
     
    Figtree3 likes this.
  11. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    No, it can't. But it adds to the mix.
     
    Lucille.b likes this.
  12. Roaring20s

    Roaring20s Well-Known Member

  13. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

  14. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    Ah, there she is! Not a painting (or an artist) I was familiar with.

    Debora

    Screenshot 2024-05-26 at 10.18.20 AM.jpeg
     
    Potteryplease and Roaring20s like this.
  15. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    This could have been from a study painted by a contract artist for commercial reproduction, or perhaps a student study reframed into an available frame but to different to be a direct copy.
    IMG_2024-05-26-093700.png
     
    Lucille.b likes this.
  16. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    I'd think it was a decorative copy like the others. These little miniatures were produced for commercial purposes.

    Debora
     
    Desertau likes this.
Draft saved Draft deleted
Similar Threads: Portrait Minature
Forum Title Date
Art Large antique pastel portrait Oct 8, 2024
Art Early American Framed Lithograph Portraits (The Moyer Gallery) Oct 2, 2024
Art Portrait of young girl signature Sep 22, 2024
Art Miniature portrait on wood box lid Jun 26, 2024
Art Antique French portrait paintings? Jun 1, 2024

Share This Page