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Peter Marié's "Beauties of New York Society"

Collection Info
Peter Marié's "Beauties of New York Society"

The nearly 300 watercolor-on-ivory miniatures in the Peter Marié collection of the “Beauties of New York Society” depict leading New Yorkers at the turn of the twentieth century. The collection as a whole documents Victorian ideals of beauty, social hierarchies among elite New Yorkers, and the revival of the art of miniature painting, which had been threatened with extinction by the advent of photography.

New York bachelor Peter Marié (1825-1903) was a social leader with a reputation for hosting elegant dinners and intimate salons. A noted art collector, he was also a connoisseur of feminine beauty. In 1889, he set about collecting images of women whom he believed epitomized female beauty (although social status was clearly a necessary qualification). Marié’s endorsement was critical to the social success of some young women: Eleanor Roosevelt, whose mother, Anna Hall Roosevelt, was among the chosen, remarked that such approval “stamped young girls and young matrons a success.” Marié commissioned French miniaturist Fernand Paillet (1850-1918) to paint his first miniatures, and later turned to local artists including Katherine Arthur Behenna (d. 1924) and Carl A. Weidner (1865-1906). Some of the portraits were painted from life, although many relied on photographs—a medium whose artistic validity was still hotly debated at the time.

Marié’s collection was well known during his lifetime. The miniatures were prominently displayed in his home at 6 E. 37th Street and in 1894 were included in a major exhibition at the National Academy of Design. The Sun illustrated 44 of the miniatures, noting that “no part of the portrait show at the Academy of Design has been looked upon with more genuine curiosity than Mr. Peter Marié’s collection of miniatures of Gotham’s most beautiful matrons and maidens.” After his death, the portraits continued to attract attention and generate controversy: the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s director, Luigi Palma di Cesnola, turned down Marié’s bequest of the beauties collection, claiming that, because many were copied from photographs, they did not qualify as art. He also challenged Marie’s premise that his subjects represented the most beautiful women in the city. After Cesnola’s public rejection, the New-York Historical Society accepted the gift eagerly, recognizing the collection as an invaluable document of New York society at the turn of the century.

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Mrs. William Allen
Carl A. Weidner
1896
1905.3
Mrs. George Cabot Lodge (ca. 1875-1960)
Carl A. Weidner
1898
1905.56
Lydia Latrobe Loring (1853-1937)
Carl A. Weidner
1900
1905.139
Mrs. Ralph G. Miller (ca. 1875-1952)
Carl A. Weidner
1895
1905.160
The Daughters of Robert Minturn
Carl A. Weidner
1899
1905.161
Mrs. Harry de Berkeley Parsons (1863-1917)
Carl A. Weidner
ca. 1895
1905.184
Miss Daisy Post (1876-1969)
Carl A. Weidner
1896
1905.197
Mrs. Edwin Main Post (1872-1960)
Carl A. Weidner
1901
1905.198
Mrs. William Post (ca. 1844-1929)
Carl A. Weidner
1895
1905.199
Mrs. Richard Stevens (ca. 1870-ca. 1963)
Fredrika Weidner
ca. 1897
1905.235
Martha Strickland
Carl A. Weidner
ca. 1900
1905.242
Mrs. John Borland Thayer (1872-1944)
Carl A. Weidner
ca. 1895
1905.247
Mrs. Albert Thieriot (ca. 1860-?)
Carl A. Weidner
1899
1905.248
Mrs. Francis Sedgwick Watson (1860-1917)
Carl A. Weidner
1898
1905.257
Mary Constance Wright (ca.1865-1940)
Carl A. Weidner
1895
1905.279
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