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French, 1790–1864
                        
                    
                    
                    
                    
                    
                    
                   
                    
                        
                    
                    
                        
                    
                        
   								
This portrait of a Creole woman in deepest mourning is typical of J. J. Vaudechamp’s New Orleans paintings in all aspects except the attire and attitude of the subject. It is the only portrait of a woman dressed entirely in black that is documented in William Keyse Rudolph’s catalogue raisonee of the artist's work. Most of Vaudechamp’s female subjects wear white collars, shawls, or bonnets, many of which are elaborate.
 
The subject’s sorrowful eyes and wistful smile are appropriate for a mourning portrait, an enduring expression of grief that in time came to memorialize the mourning more than the mourned. Although there is no documentary evidence to prove conclusively that this is a mourning portrait, the subject’s age, expression, and attire fit the prescribed parameters that were well known in the polite society that patronized Vaudechamp. Granted, many older women were often in mourning. Childhood mortality was high and epidemics were frequent in the Louisiana lowlands. Indeed, two Asiatic cholera and two yellow fever epidemics killed 10,000 people—nearly a third of the population—in New Orleans between October 1832 and June 1833, just prior to the date ascribed to this portrait.
                    
                
            French, 1790–1864
Portrait of a Woman
1834
                            Object Type:
                            Painting
                        
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            Creation Place:
                            Northern Europe, French
                        
                    
                    
                       
                            Dimensions:
                       
                        32 1/8 in. x 25 5/8 in. (81.6 cm x 65.09 cm)
                            Medium and Support:
                            Oil on canvas
                        
                    
					
                    
                        
                            Accession Number:
                            1940.0015
                        
                    
					
                            Credit Line:
                            Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts Association Purchase
                        
                    
					
					
          			
      				
      				
            		Currently On View
 
            		
          			         
          			  
					
                    
                    
                        This portrait of a Creole woman in deepest mourning is typical of J. J. Vaudechamp’s New Orleans paintings in all aspects except the attire and attitude of the subject. It is the only portrait of a woman dressed entirely in black that is documented in William Keyse Rudolph’s catalogue raisonee of the artist's work. Most of Vaudechamp’s female subjects wear white collars, shawls, or bonnets, many of which are elaborate.
The subject’s sorrowful eyes and wistful smile are appropriate for a mourning portrait, an enduring expression of grief that in time came to memorialize the mourning more than the mourned. Although there is no documentary evidence to prove conclusively that this is a mourning portrait, the subject’s age, expression, and attire fit the prescribed parameters that were well known in the polite society that patronized Vaudechamp. Granted, many older women were often in mourning. Childhood mortality was high and epidemics were frequent in the Louisiana lowlands. Indeed, two Asiatic cholera and two yellow fever epidemics killed 10,000 people—nearly a third of the population—in New Orleans between October 1832 and June 1833, just prior to the date ascribed to this portrait.
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