Marion Hiller Fenno at nine as Mandolinata

Tarbell, Edmund Charles (1862-1938)


Item type:
painting
Date of creation:
1887-1888
Height:
107.3 cm  (42 1/4 in.)
Width:
76.5 cm  (30 1/8 in.)
Technique / Medium:
oil on canvas

Description

Commentary from museum website:
Fenno, the daughter of an affluent wool merchant, is dressed as La Mandolinata, a character from popular poems and songs of the day who sang serenades and accompanied herself on the mandolin. The Fenno and Beebe families, who lived in townhouses near each other in the wealthy Back Bay section of Boston, organized this tableau vivant as part of a social gathering. Just as artists—especially in England—had since the eighteenth century portrayed professional actors dressed for their roles on stage, the Fenno family wished Tarbell to render their daughter in her role as an amateur actress in a tableau vivant.
Tarbell received the commission shortly after he returned to Boston from studying in France, and the skills he had learned are apparent in his portrayal of Fenno’s hands on the mandolin and his rendering of her costume and the fur rug. Tarbell [23.532] later became an important Impressionist artist and an influential teacher at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
This text was adapted from Carol Troyen and Janet L. Comey, Amerikakaigakodomo no sekai [Children in American art], exh. cat. (Nagoya, Japan: Nagoya/Boston Museum of Fine Arts, 2007).

Iconclass

61B2(...)11
historical person (MARION HILLER FENNO) - historical person (MARION HILLER FENNO) portrayed alone
48C7522
one person playing string instrument (plucked)

Instruments [MIMO Code] (notes)

Neapolitan mandolin [3515]

RIdIM images


Image URLs

image link 1

RIdIM record id

5926