The New Child - The Origins of Modern Childhood in English Art 1730-1830 (Berkeley Art Museum, 1995-08-23 - 1995-11-19)The New Child - The Origins of Modern Childhood in English Art 1730-1830 (Dixon Gallery & Gardens, 1995-12-10 - 1996-02-04)The New Child - The Origins of Modern Childhood in English Art 1730-1830 (Joslyn Art Museum, 1996-03-09 - 1996-05-05)The Conversation Piece - Arthur Devis & His Contemporaries (Yale Center for British Art, 1980-10-01 - 1980-11-30)
Publications:
Malcolm Cormack, Concise Catalogue of Paintings in the Yale Center for British Art, Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, CT, 1985, pp. 88-89, N590.2 A83 (YCBA)Ellen G. D'Oench, The Conversation Piece: Arthur Devis & his contemporaries, , Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, 1980, pp. 28, 78, cat. no. 69, NJ18 D5151 D64 OVERSIZERichard D. Leppert, The Sight of Sound: Music, Representation, and the History of the Body, University of California Press, Berkley, 1993, p. 112, 113, Fig. 44, ML3800 L6 1993Mario Praz, Conversation Pieces : A Survey of the Informal Group Portrait in Europe and America, , Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, University Park, 1971, p. 159, 177, No. 124, ND1304 +P713 Oversize (YCBA)James Christen Steward, The New Child : British Art and the Origins of Modern Childhood, 1730-1830, , University Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, UC Berkeley, Berkeley, 1995, pp. 40, 85, pl. 12, N6766 S78 1995 OVERSIZE (YCBA)Ian Woodfield, Music of the Raj: A Social and Economic History of Music in Late Eighteenth-Century Anglo-Indian Society, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2000, p. 31, pl. 4, ML338.3 W66 2000
Gallery Label:
This enigmatic portrait represents Emily and George Mason, children of Bryant Mason, an agent for the East India Company. In 1781, at the age of eighteen, Bryant Mason moved to India and would soon marry and raise his young family there. Painted around 1795, just before Arthur William Devis left India for London, this portrait serves to define Mason’s Anglo-Indian family in opposition to native Indian people. His children are physically removed from their Indian servants and inhabit a self-consciously western interior. Their servants wait outside while Emily dances with a tambourine, and George plays with a miniature musket and military drum. Though perhaps imitating Indian dance, Emily’s tambourine points to her life of carefree leisure, while George’s military toys betray the fact that British supremacy in India was based on conquest and perpetual subjugation. Gallery label for installation of YCBA collection, 2016