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Bell and Dorothy Freeman

Image credit: Museum of the Home

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Notes

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Isobel (seated) was fourteen and her sister Dorothy (standing) was eight years old when this portrait was painted. Their father was a barrister and the family lived in London, near Regent's Park. The room shown in the painting is furnished in the Aesthetic or ‘artistic’ taste, which became fashionable among the urban middle-classes, especially in artistic and intellectual circles, as an alternative to more mainstream furnishing choices. ‘Artistic’ features include the window with small round leaded lights, the heavy velvet curtains in a rich but muted red and the red matting on the floor. The wallpaper, which can be seen just behind the settee, is a pattern called ‘Sunflower’, designed by William Morris in 1879 and manufactured by Jeffrey for Morris & Co.

The Geffrye, Museum of the Home

London

Title

Bell and Dorothy Freeman

Date

1889

Medium

watercolour on paper

Measurements

H 90 x W 73.5 cm

Accession number

229/2015

Acquisition method

purchased from a private owner with the assistance of the Heritage Lottery Fund, the Art Fund and the Arts Council England/Victoria and Albert Museum Purchase Grant Fund, 2015

Work type

Drawing & watercolour

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The Geffrye, Museum of the Home

136 Kingsland Road, London, Greater London E2 8EA England

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