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Poet; highly regarded in her own day, her reputation now rests chiefly on Sonnets from the Portuguese (1850), and the long narrative poem, Aurora Leigh (1857); after eloping with the poet Robert Browning, she lived chiefly in Italy. Her portrait was painted as a companion piece to that of her husband. According to a label on the back of the frame, it was done 'expressly for Sophia May Eckley and pronounced by Robert Browning to be the best Portrait ever taken of the Poetess'; but at the time, Robert Browning was not convinced that it was a good likeness and wrote to Mrs Eckley that 'The portrait is not perfect certainly; the nose seems over long and there are some other errors in the face; also, the whole figure gives the idea of a larger woman than Ba'.
Title
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Date
1858
Medium
oil on canvas
Measurements
H 73.7 x W 58.4 cm
Accession number
1899
Acquisition method
Given by Florence Barclay, 1921
Work type
Painting