Jump to Submenu

Sarah Hodges, Later Lady Innes

oil painting of young woman in blue dress holding flower

Thomas Gainsborough (1727–88)
Sarah Hodges, Later Lady Innes, ca. 1759
Oil on canvas
40 x 28 5/8 in. (101.6 x 72.7 cm)
The Frick Collection, New York

 

Sarah Hodges (1737–1770), the only child and heir of Ipswich-based parents, was among the last sitters Gainsborough painted before moving to the fashionable spa town of Bath in late 1759. Perhaps commissioned to mark Sarah's twenty-first birthday, the portrait adopts a floral motif familiar in portraits of the previous century by Anthony van Dyck. The sitter holds a rosebud while at left a rose unfurls in the bush, symbolizing the promise of maturity, an apt motif for an unmarried heiress. Adorned with a black choker and white feather pompom on her unpowdered hair, Sarah wears a blue watered-silk dress à la française, its front opening covered by a stomacher (triangular piece of fabric) decorated with blue scalloping. The painting represents a transition between Gainsborough's early conversation pieces and the full-sized portraits he would paint in Bath. Here, Gainsborough demonstrates his range of paint handling, from the feathery strokes of Sarah's face to the tightly painted flowers that recall seventeenth-century Dutch still lifes to the looser rendering of her hands and dress.