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The Changing Face of Childhood: British Children's Portraits and their Influence

Traveling April 20, 2007-November 4, 2007 to Two Venues

By , About.com Guide


"Consider the child." In 2007 that is standard procedure in most cultures. 300 years ago in the Western world, though, we were only beginning to adjust our concepts of children, realizing that they were autonomous human beings and not merely small adults. Artists began to approach painting children's portraits in a more natural way, portraying them as children in the throes of childhood (also a new societal concept).

Here we have a selection of images from the special exhibition The Changing Face of Childhood: British Children's Portraits and their Influence in Europe, on view at the Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main, April 20 to July 15, 2007 and the Dulwich Picture Gallery, London, August 1 to November 4, 2007. Arranged chronologically, the pictures survey children in landscapes unaccompanied by adults and illustrate the influence of British painters' awareness of "children" and "childhood" on the rest of European art from the early 17th through the mid-19th centuries.

Images 1-12 of 13

  1. Maddalena Cattaneo, 1623© 2007 Board of Trustees, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; used with permission
  2. The Painter's Daughters, ca. 1758Photo © V&A Images/Victoria & Albert Museum, London; used with permission
  3. Miss Crewe, ca. 1775Private collection; used with permission
  4. Master John Truman-Villebois and his Brother Henry, ca. 1783Photo © Richard Green, London; used with permission
  5. The Marsham Children, 1787Staatliche Museen Berlin, Gemäldegalerie / Photo © Jörg P. Anders, Berlin; used with permission
  6. The Oddie Children, 1789© North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh; used with permission
  7. The Cavendish Children, 1790Photo © Ursula Edelmann, Frankfurt am Main; used with permission
  8. Maria Christina of Bourbon-Naples, 1790© Museo e Gallerie Nazionali di Capodimonte, Naples; used with permission
  9. Portrait of Sir Francis Ford's Children Giving a Coin to a Beggar Boy, ca. 1793Tate Gallery, London / Photo © Tate London 2007; used with permission
  10. Henry Raeburn Inglis (Boy and Rabbit), 1814Photo © Photography Prudence Cuming Associates; used iwth permission
  11. The Calmady Children, 1823Photo © 1992 The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; used with permission
  12. Fisherboy (Josef von Amerling), 1830Photo © Fotostudio Otto 1995, Vienna; used with permission
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