Portrait of the Edgeworth Family by Adam Buck (1759-1833)
Year |
1787
|
Size |
Sheet: 25.1 x 30.4 cm
|
Medium |
Coloured pencil, watercolour and graphite on paper
|
Provenance |
Purchased, 2006
|
Number |
NGI.2006.14
|
Curator's Choice
We've asked the Gallery's curators to select some of their favourite works from the collection. Here, Anne Hodge, Curator of Prints and Drawings, shares an insight into a fascinating work on paper:
"At a time when many families are homeschooling their children, I thought it might be interesting to see how an eighteenth-century miniature painter depicted a famous Irish family at work together.
At the centre of the composition is Richard Lovell Edgeworth (1744-1817) an engineer and inventor from Edgeworthstown, Co. Longford. He faces his eldest daughter, the famous novelist Maria (1767-1849), as he points to a drawing on the table. Richard's third wife, Elizabeth Sneyd (standing holding a baby), and numerous other children look on.
In 1798, Maria and her father published a two volume treatise, 'Practical Education', which became an acclaimed manual for child-rearing. Key ideas included encouraging hands-on learning and experiment. Above all, children were to be encouraged to 'learn from their own experience a just confidence in their own powers.'
Other successful Edgeworth siblings included William, a civil engineer who built some of the first roads in the west of Ireland; the influential economist Francis Ysido; and botanist and pioneer of photography Michael Packenham Edgeworth."