Susan Poinsett
Edward Greene Malbone, 1802
About this artwork
Edward Greene Malbone's *Susan Poinsett* (1802) is a gem of early American portraiture, capturing the sitter in a delicate watercolor on ivory miniature measuring just 2½ x 2⅛ inches. This intimate format was ideal for personal jewelry like lockets or brooches, loved ones to carry a lifelike image close to the heart. Malbone, one of America's premier miniaturists active around the turn of the 19th, excelled in this medium, rendering fine details with translucent washes that exploit ivory's luminous glow for a lifelike softness. Painted during the Federal period, when the young United States embraced neoclassical elegance, the portrait reflects the era's fashion and poise in women's portraiture. Malbone's technique—meticulous layering of pigments on the smooth ivory surface—produced portraits prized for their precision and emotional depth, often commissioned by elite families. Susan Poinsett, elegantly posed, embodies the refined femininity celebrated in post-Revolutionary America. Housed in The Metropolitan Museum of Art's American Wing, this work, acquired through the Harris Brisbane Dick Fund in 1938, highlights the artistry of a fleeting tradition. Miniatures like this bridged painting and personal devotion, offering a window into 19th-century intimacy and cultural aspirations.