Mrs. Robinson as Perdita

Richard Cosway British
Sitter Mary "Perdita" Robinson British
Subject William Shakespeare British

Not on view

This lovely young woman seated in a park, fingering a spindle wound with thread and accompanied by her dog, is Mary Robinson. When she performed the role of Perdita in an adaption of Shakespeare's "Winter's Tale," staged by David Garrick in 1779, George, Prince of Wales fell in love with her, and she became his mistress for two years.
The artist Cosway enjoyed a long career as a fashionable society portraitist and worked in a range of media. Here he uses watercolor for a small full length image that suggestively links the subject's life on and off the stage--Robinson is seated in an English landscape, but rustic elements of her gown and her spindle refer to her stage identity as Perdita, the adopted daughter of shepherds loved by a prince.

Mrs. Robinson as Perdita, Richard Cosway (British, Oakford, Devon 1742–1821 London), Graphite, blue chalk, and watercolor, with touches of  gouache (bodycolor)

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