Portrait of a Lady
Sarah Goodridge, ca. 1820
About this artwork
Step into the intimate world of early 19th-century America with *Portrait of a Lady* by Sarah Goodridge, created around 1820. This exquisite watercolor on ivory miniature, measuring just 3 1/4 x 2 3/8 inches, captures the refined elegance of its unnamed female subject. Housed in The Metropolitan Museum of Art's American Wing, it reflects the Federal-era fascination with personal keepsakes—small-scale portraits often worn as lockets or brooches, preserving loved ones' likenesses during an age of separation by travel or loss. Sarah Goodridge, a pioneering Boston-based artist and one of the few successful women in the male-dominated field of portraiture, mastered the demanding technique of painting on ivory. This medium's smooth, translucent surface allowed for luminous skin tones and intricate details, blending European miniaturist traditions with American sensibility. Goodridge's precise brushwork highlights the sitter's poised gaze and delicate features, embodying ideals of feminine grace in post-Revolutionary society. As a gift to the Met from Gloria Manney in 2006, this work celebrates women's portraits within American art, offering a window into private lives and the era's cultural emphasis on family and sentiment. A testament to Goodridge's skill, it invites visitors to marvel at art's power to make the personal eternal.