Continental

The history of the portrait miniature in Europe is one of rich cross-cultural exchange, with many artists of varied origins influencing the art form’s development in England and abroad. Some of the earliest portrait miniatures were painted by the Clouet family in France with on . By the seventeenth century, miniatures proliferated in continental Europe.

Artists trained by French enameller Jean Toutin (1578–1644) brought to the courts of Europe, spurred by their dissemination as ideal diplomatic gifts due to their compactness, durability, and jewel-like qualities. In Northern Europe, a taste for miniatures painted with oil on metal supports emerged from the popularity of small devotional works, but the medium did not have the widespread international appeal of enamel or watercolor.

In the early eighteenth century, Venetian pastellist Rosalba Carriera (1673–1757) transformed the portrait miniature by painting delicate watercolors on the lids of snuffboxes. Her preference for , an opaque watercolor that resembles pastel, was highly influential among continental artists. The miniature thrived in France in particular, driven by aristocratic tastes for portraiture and all things tiny and exquisite—but by the 1840s, the miniature met its demise with the invention of photography.

doi: 10.37764/8322.8.300