Mrs. Albert Bridges
Henry Inman, 1840–42
About this artwork
Henry Inman's *Mrs. Albert Bridges* (1840–42) is a delicate watercolor profile portrait on off-white Bristol board, measuring just 7½ × 6¼ inches. Captured during the early years of American portrait miniature tradition, this intimate work exemplifies Inman's mastery of the medium. As a leading New York painter and founder of the National Academy of Design Inman specialized in luminous watercolors that brought affordability and portability to portraiture, making high-quality likenesses accessible beyond the elite oil paintings of the era. The profile view, a nod to classical antiquity and Regency-era silhouettes, highlights the subject's refined features with precise brushwork and subtle tonal gradations possible on smooth Bristol board. This technique allowed for intricate details in an era when photography was emerging but not yet widespread, serving as cherished personal mementos exchanged among family and friends. Housed in The American Wing of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, thanks to the 1926 bequest of Eliza K. DeLamater, the piece reflects mid-19th-century American culture's emphasis on individual identity and domestic sentiment. It invites visitors to ponder the life of Mrs. Bridges, frozen in a moment of quiet elegance amid a young nation's growing artistic confidence.