Miss Frances Lee (1769) by Francis CotesMilwaukee Art Museum
British Empire
This portrait is of Miss Frances Lee; she the eldest daughter of Englishman Robert Cooper Lee, who traveled to Jamaica in 1749 to make his fortune on a British sugar plantation.
There he met her mother, Priscilla Kelly, who was the daughter of an African slave. Robert and Priscilla could not legally marry in Jamaica; they were married only after returning to England in 1771.
Fanny
Nicknamed Fanny, Frances was sent back to England at ten years old, to board at a girls’ school, due to her delicate health. An uncle commissioned this portrait for Fanny’s parents in Jamaica so that they would have an image of their daughter (this was before photography was invented).
Pastel palette
Francis Cotes, the artist, was a famous portrait painter in eighteenth-century England.
He was known for his talent with pastel, pigmented crayons that produce delicate, pale colors. The greens, creams, and pinks in this painting show how the artist translated his color palette in pastel to his work in oil paint.
Dress
This little girl’s dress is made of both translucent white lace and shiny pink silk—and reveals the artist’s skill at depicting fabrics and textures in paint.
Handkerchief
Miss Lee holds a curiously shaped bit of fabric. If you think it looks like a rabbit, you’re right.
She’s playing with a handkerchief tied into the shape of a rabbit. The simple toy, likely made for her by an adult (like an early balloon animal), reminds us of her youthful nature, despite her serious expression.
Hat
Children were dressed in their finest clothing for a portrait painting, thus Miss Lee’s fancy matching cap. Yet, portraits of children were not required to be as formal and detailed as those of adults.
Cotes was particularly skilled at painting children—unlike other artists, he did not paint them as tiny adults—and made a successful living painting their portraits.
Francis Cotes
(English, 1726–1770)
Miss Frances Lee, 1769
Oil on canvas
36 × 28 1/4 in. (91.44 × 71.76 cm)
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. William D. Vogel
M1964.5
Photographer credit: Larry Sanders