Comb
Maker
Unknown, American
Collections
ClassificationsDECORATIVE ARTS
Dateca. 1820-1830
Mediumpossibly tortoise shell
Dimensions4 x 5 1/2 x 2 1/4 in. (10.2 x 14 x 5.7 cm.)
Descriptionlarge semi-circular comb with many long teeth; possibly tortoiseshell; comb worn by Betsy Brownell Gilbert in her portrait painted by Ammi Phillips
Credit LineJonathan and Karin Fielding Collection
Label TextFrom 1809 to the 1860s, Ammi Phillips painted portraits of well- to-do farmers, merchants, clergy, and officials in Connecticut, western Massachusetts, and upstate New York. While he moved from village to village seeking commissions, he seems always to have had a steady flow of work. His style changed considerably over the decades, but its constants were a sure line, strong coloring, and a plain background. Betsy Brownell Gilbert (1796–1825) lived in Columbia County, New York. Her Empire-style dress suggests a date for her portrait of about 1820, when Phillips was living in nearby Rhinebeck, New York. The fashionable comb Betsy wears in her hair (the original of which is displayed nearby) was probably made from the shell of a hawksbill tortoise from the Caribbean.Status
On viewObject numberL2015.41.26
William Blake
1807
Object number: 000.12