Lover's Eye locket

Probably British

Not on view

Miniature paintings in watercolor on ivory, of a single eye, were introduced first in France and quickly became a fad in Great Britain in the late eighteenth-century. This art form later transferred, in a modest way, to the United States by the early nineteenth-century. They came to be known as “lover’s eyes” –- intensely private objects, usually of the giver’s eye presented to a loved one. The disembodied eye allowed the viewer to gaze upon the object of their affection, known only to them, and then, actively, the gaze was returned. Eye miniatures also served as mourning jewelry for lost loved ones.

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