Skip to main content

A Girl Holding a Doll

Maker (American, 1749 - 1831)
ClassificationsPAINTINGS
Date1804
Mediumoil on canvas
Dimensions34 x 22 in. (86.4 x 55.9 cm.)
Signedl.l.: J Peale 1804
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens. Gift of the Virginia Steele Scott Foundation
Label TextA Girl Holding a Doll celebrates material abundance and the increasingly domesticated role of women in American society during the 19th century. Peale's anonymous subject sits in an ebonized and gilded, turned-wood chair made especially for children. Like the chair, the elaborately patterned rug, carved wooden doll, and doll's cradle indicate that the girl comes from a wealthy home. Her dress is in the latest French Empire style and her wispy hair falls loose around her face, reflecting a new emphasis on naturalism in this period. The doll, dressed in the same fashion as her owner, and the cradle foreshadow the little girl's likely future role as a wife and mother.
James Peale most likely painted this portrait in Philadelphia, as it is similar to other paintings of women and girls wearing stylish neoclassical fashions and coiffures that he completed there in the first decade of the 19th century.

Status
On view
Object number83.8.35
William Flintham
James Peale
ca. 1805
Object number: 51.14
Ann Britton Cook
James Peale
1821
Object number: 91.280
Thomas Jefferson
Charles Willson Peale
1776
Object number: 24.8
George Washington
Charles Peale Polk
1790-1793
Object number: 19.2
George Washington
Rembrandt Peale
n.d.
Object number: 19.1
George Washington
Charles Willson Peale
after 1779
Object number: 19.13
Tacy Shoemaker
Charles Willson Peale
1818
Object number: 98.1
Still Life with Wine, Cake, and Nuts
Raphaelle Peale
1819
Object number: 83.8.36
Winter Landscape
Arthur James Emery Powell
n.d.
Object number: 2006.17.5
Henry Clay
James Reid Lambdin
n.d.
Object number: 19.7
Chateau Thierry
William James Glackens
1906
Object number: 83.8.19