Attrib. Mary Heber, Sleeping Child – Original c.1830s watercolour painting

Somerset & Wood
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Stock Number:
JT-879
Attrib. Mary Heber, Sleeping Child – Original c.1830s watercolour painting

An original c.1830s watercolour painting, Attrib. Mary Heber, Sleeping Child.

A fine watercolour attributed to Mary Heber (1787–1846) of Hodnet Hall in Shropshire.

All artworks come with a Certificate of Authenticity and—if it is a collection artwork—its accompanying collection text or artist biography.


Details

Signed: No.

Height: 12cm (4.7″) Width: 10.1cm (4″)

Condition: In good condition for its age. The picture may have minor imperfections such as slight marks, toning, foxing, creasing or pinholes, commensurate with age. Please see photos for detail.There are historic adhesive marks and/or paper remnants across the verso, from previous mounting.

Presented: Unframed.


Mary Heber Watercolours 1830s

This picture forms part of a fine collection of works that we have for sale attributed to Mary Heber (1787–1846) of Hodnet Hall in Shropshire. Many of the pictures are initialled M.H., and the collection includes an engraving of Mary's brother, the Bishop of Calcutta, Reginald Heber (1783–1826). The works date from the 1830s, after the death of Mary's first husband, Rev. Charles Cowper Cholmondeley, Rector of Hodnet, Shropshire, in 1831 and before her second marriage, to Rev. Samuel Herrick Macaulay in 1841.

Mary Heber was from a wealthy and learned family. Her father was the cleric and landowner Rev. Reginald Heber (d.1804), who was a man of some intellectual power and who had been a fellow and tutor of Brasenose College, Oxford. Her brother was the celebrated English bishop, traveller, man of letters and hymn-writer, Reginald Heber (1783–1826), who became Bishop of Calcutta; and her half brother, Richard Heber (1773–1833), was a book-collector, who amassed a superb library estimated at nearly 150,000 volumes.

Mary herself clearly had considerable artistic talent, and she is described as 'a capable, even formidable woman' in the biography of her granddaughter, the novelist Mary Cholmondeley). On the death of her husband in 1831 the family had to leave the rectory, and in 1833 on the death of her brother Richard, Mary Heber inherited the greatly indebted Hodnet Hall for her lifetime. Mary sold the celebrated library and succeeded in virtually freeing the estate from debt by her own death in 1846. Her three granddaughters, Mary, Victoria and Hester, were all talented artists who, it seems, inherited their aptitude from their grandmother.

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