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Saturday, December 27, 2025 |
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| Philip Mould reveals newly discovered Joan Carlile painting that reframes Black representation in British art |
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Joan Carlile (1606- 1679), Portrait of a Lady, 1650s Oil on canvas, 22 ½ x 17 ¼ in. (57 x 44 cm).
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LONDON.- Recently discovered in Australia, this is an exciting addition to Joan Carliles oeuvre and a crucial contribution to the study of Black subjects in British art.
Carlile was one of the first professional female painters working in Britain and her position within the narrative of British art is only now beginning to emerge. During her lifetime she was named, alongside Mary Beale, in a list of notable Modern Masters in Sir William Sandersons Graphice, and enjoyed the patronage of prominent society figures. However, she soon slipped into art historical obscurity and it was only in the mid-twentieth century that her name was reinserted in the canon of British art studies.
With only thirty to forty known works by her hand, this paintings format is unusual for Carlile, showing a lady with a Black attendant. She based the figure of the attendant on Aegidius Sadeler IIs engraving after Titians Portrait of Laura Dianti (late 1520s), one of the first formal European portraits to include an enslaved African person. Sadelers print circulated widely by the 1640s, and Carlile likely studied a copy of it owned by her collector friend, the Earl of Dysart.
The inclusion of a Black attendant in Carlile's picture reflects the periods evolving visual language, shaped by Britains expeditions and overseas empire. Although this work predates Britains dominance in the Atlantic slave trade, Carlile was responding to the growing desire to depict Black figures in portraiture as foils for white wealth and beauty.
The prints relevance today remains striking. The depiction of Black subjects in both historical and contemporary images has been heavily explored in recent years. Most notably, contemporary artist Barbara Walker features this very same print in her series Vanishing Point (2018-), in which she isolates and meticulously renders the Black figures in classical paintings from major public collections.
This dialogue between past and present informs the study of the Black figure in British art and speaks to ongoing questions of representation and visibility.
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