Skip to Main Content
George Engleheart, Portrait of Thomas James Mathias, ca. 1781, watercolor on ivory, sight: 1 9/16 x 1 5/16 in. (4 x 3.3 cm), case: 2 x 3 3/4 in. (5.1 x 9.5 cm), Gift of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Starr and the Starr Foundation, Inc., F58-60/46
George Engleheart, Portrait of Thomas James Mathias (case verso), ca. 1781, watercolor on ivory, sight: 1 9/16 x 1 5/16 in. (4 x 3.3 cm), case: 2 x 3 3/4 in. (5.1 x 9.5 cm), Gift of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Starr and the Starr Foundation, Inc., F58-60/46
Ivory case interior, side A, with view of the inscription on the laid paper backing, Portrait of Thomas James Mathias, ca. 1770
Ivory case interior, side B, Portrait of Thomas James Mathias, ca. 1770
of

George Engleheart, Portrait of Thomas James Mathias, ca. 1781

Artist George Engleheart (English, 1750–1829)
Title Portrait of Thomas James Mathias
Object Date ca. 1781
Former Titles Portrait of a Man; T. J. Mathias
Medium Watercolor on ivory
Setting Gold bezel in ivory case
Dimensions Sight: 1 9/16 x 1 5/16 in. (4 x 3.3 cm)
Case: 2 x 3 3/4 in. (5.1 x 9.5 cm)
Inscription Inscribed on laid paper backing: “T. J. Mathias Esq. / of Naples, / Son of Vincent Mathias / Esq. / and Author of the / Pursuits of Literature”
Credit Line Gift of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Starr and the Starr Foundation, Inc., F58-60/46

doi: 10.37764/8322.5.1373

Citation

Chicago:

Blythe Sobol, “George Engleheart, Portrait of Thomas James Mathias, ca. 1781,” catalogue entry in Aimee Marcereau DeGalan, Blythe Sobol, and Maggie Keenan, The Starr Collection of Portrait Miniatures, 1500–1850: The Collections of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, vol. 2, ed. Aimee Marcereau DeGalan (Kansas City, MO: Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 2024), https://doi.org/10.37764/8322.5.1373.

MLA:

Sobol, Blythe. “George Engleheart, Portrait of Thomas James Mathias, ca. 1781,” catalogue entry. Aimee Marcereau DeGalan, Blythe Sobol, and Maggie Keenan. The Starr Collection of Portrait Miniatures, 1500–1850: The Collections of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, edited by Aimee Marcereau DeGalan, vol. 2, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 2024. doi: 10.37764/8322.5.1373.

Artist's Biography

See the artist’s biography in volume 4.

Catalogue Entry

An inscription by a later hand mounted inside the case of this miniature identifies the sitter as Thomas James Mathias (ca. 1754–1835), a British satirist and literary scholar. Mathias is best known for his impeccable Italian translations as well as a satire published between 1794 and 1798, The Pursuits of Literature. After several years as a fellow at the University of Cambridge, Mathias served as treasurer and later librarian in the royal household under King George III. The Mathias family was of an intellectual, artistic bent, with close ties to Queen Charlotte and the diarist Fanny Burney. Several family members sat for George Engleheart between 1781 and 1797, according to his fee book, with the earliest date being the most likely candidate for this portrait.

Engleheart depicts Mathias as a gentleman scholar. He is posed in three-quarters view before a background of muted grays and browns. His elegant but subdued attire is fitting for a Cambridge don of the time. The miniature’s small size and limited palette, along with Mathias’s hairstyle, in a with , is in keeping with the proposed completion date of around 1781. This date coincides with the end of what is known as the “modest phase” of Engleheart’s career, for the unpretentious styling of his portraits. The year 1781 also marks the date of Mathias’s first publication, a volume of Norse poetry. Both artist and sitter were on the cusp of change as they entered a more prominent phase of their careers.

Blythe Sobol
May 2021

Notes

  1. Mathias’s year of birth is typically listed as 1754. There is no known record of his birth, but the 1754 date is most likely taken from the records of his entry into Trinity College, Cambridge, on July 2, 1770, at the age of sixteen. However, Mathias’s burial register, uncovered by Maggie Keenan, research assistant at the Nelson-Atkins, records his age at the time of his death as eighty-five years old, suggesting a birth year of 1750. General Register Office: Foreign Registers and Returns, class RG 33, piece 15, National Archives, Kew; Paul Baines, “Mathias, Thomas James (1753/4–1835), satirist and Italian scholar,” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, September 23, 2004, https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/18334. See also Joseph Sheldon Mabbett, “Thomas James Mathias and the Pursuits of Literature” (PhD diss., University of Fribourg, 1964).

  2. Baines, “Mathias, Thomas James”; Thomas Mathias, The Pursuits of Literature: A Satirical Poem, in Four Dialogues, with Notes (London: T. Beckett, 1798). The revised 1798 edition unites all prior volumes published between 1794 and 1797.

  3. Baines, “Mathias, Thomas James.” He was appointed sub-treasurer to the queen in 1782 and became a librarian at Buckingham Palace in 1812.

  4. Baines, “Mathias, Thomas James.” Mathias’s grandparents Jacques Mathias (1662–?) and Elisabeth Marie Bardon (1665–ca. 1732) were French refugees. By the 1730s they were well established in England; T. J. Mathias owned a conversation piece (informal group portrait) by Gawen Hamilton dating to that decade, titled A Musical Party, the Mathias Family, now at the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge (647). His uncle Gabriel Mathias (1719–1804) was a painter who studied under Allan Ramsay (1713–1784). Gabriel was later appointed to the office of the Privy Purse, while his brother Vincent—T. J. Mathias’s father—was a sub-treasurer in the queen’s household. Mathias’s brothers held similar royal appointments, either serving as treasurers or, in the case of his brother Andrew (1768–1823), surgeon extraordinary to the Queen. Their mother, Marianne (1724–1799), was the daughter of Alured Popple, Governor of Bermuda (1699–1744). Their sister Albinia was a close friend of Fanny Burney’s sister Charlotte. Albinia’s daughter Marianne Skerrett (1793–1887) became principal dresser and confidant of Queen Victoria, continuing the family’s long legacy of devoted royal service.

  5. Engleheart painted a “Mr. Mathias, Jun.” in 1781, according to George Williamson’s transcription of Engleheart’s fee book. George Williamson, George Engleheart, 1750–1829, Miniature Painter to George III (London: George Bell and Sons, 1902), 105.

  6. Graham Reynolds described the first part of Engleheart’s career as his “modest school” phase, taking after midcentury miniaturists like Samuel Cotes (English, 1733–1818) and Gervase Spencer (English, 1722–1763), whose unpretentious, small-scale portraits stand in contrast to the confidence and flair of work by later artists like Richard Cosway (English, 1742–1821) and John Smart (English, 1741–1811) (all of whom began by working in the earlier “modest” style). Graham Reynolds, English Portrait Miniatures (London: A. and C. Black, 1952), 120–30.

  7. Thomas James Mathias, Runic Odes, imitated from the Norse Tongue, in the Manner of Mr. Gray (London: T. Payne, Meys-Gate; T. Becket, Adelphi; J. Sewell, Cornhill; and T. and J. Merrill, Cambridge, 1781).

  8. Mathias’s portrait is enclosed in the lid of an ivory toothpick box of the same period, but as is often the case, the box and the miniature were likely brought together by a dealer to increase the value of both in the early twentieth century. Elle Shushan, conversations with Aimee Marcereau DeGalan and Katelyn Crawford, curators at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, March 27–31, 2017, Nelson-Atkins curatorial files. Georgian toothpick boxes were typically shaped as narrow rectangles, often with cut corners or rounded ends, as in this case. According to conservator Carol Aiken, the case and the miniature were almost certainly a later marriage, with a gold fillet dating to the twentieth century. Carol Aiken, conversations with the author, March 18–22, 2018, Nelson-Atkins curatorial files.

Provenance

Mr. John W. (1905–2000) and Mrs. Martha Jane (1906–2011) Starr, Kansas City, MO, by 1958;

Their gift to The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO, 1958.

Exhibitions

The Starr Foundation Collection of Miniatures, The Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, December 8, 1972–January 14, 1973, no cat., no. 80, as T.J. Mathias.

References

Ross E. Taggart, The Starr Collection of Miniatures in the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery (Kansas City, MO: Nelson Gallery-Atkins Museum, 1971), no. 80, p. 29, (repro.), as Portrait of Thomas James Mathias.

No known related works at this time. If you have additional information on this object, please tell us more.

George Engleheart, Portrait of Thomas James Mathias, ca. 1781, watercolor on ivory, sight: 1 9/16 x 1 5/16 in. (4 x 3.3 cm), case: 2 x 3 3/4 in. (5.1 x 9.5 cm), Gift of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Starr and the Starr Foundation, Inc., F58-60/46
George Engleheart, Portrait of Thomas James Mathias (case verso), ca. 1781, watercolor on ivory, sight: 1 9/16 x 1 5/16 in. (4 x 3.3 cm), case: 2 x 3 3/4 in. (5.1 x 9.5 cm), Gift of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Starr and the Starr Foundation, Inc., F58-60/46
Ivory case interior, side A, with view of the inscription on the laid paper backing, Portrait of Thomas James Mathias, ca. 1770
Ivory case interior, side B, Portrait of Thomas James Mathias, ca. 1770
of