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Monday 10 January 2005
LOST PORTRAIT OF MARY SEACOLE
DISCOVERED
A lost painted portrait,
of Mary Seacole, the famous black nurse whose outstanding work
in the Crimea can be seen as complementary of that of her contemporary
Florence Nightingale, has recently come to light. This, the only
known painted portrait of Seacole, has been lent to the National
Portrait Gallery by its owner and will go on display from Monday
10 January.
Unlike Nightingale, Mary Seacole
(c.1805-1881) did not come from a wealthy middle-class background
or have any formal training. As well as the restrictions placed
on women at the time, Seacole overcame racial prejudices to establish
herself as a notable humanitarian, whose hands-on approach to
nursing has become an inspiration to nurses today. Seacole was
voted Greatest Black Briton in an online poll in February 2004
and this year the bicentenary of her birth is marked with a series
of events and exhibitions in London.
The newly discovered portrait,
the only oil portrait identified as Mary Seacole, is by an obscure
London artist called Albert Challen and dates from 1869. The
dignified likeness shows the head and shoulders of a mature Seacole,
wearing a red neckerchief and the three medals which she was
awarded for her service. The portrait had been used to back a
framed print and was only recently discovered when the inscription
on the back "AC Challen, 1869" caught the eye of a
dealer who unsealed the frame and discovered the hidden portrait.
Seemingly unaware of what he had found, he then sold the portrait
at a small local auction in Warwickshire and it was subsequently
acquired by writer and historian Helen Rappaport, who has been
researching the life of Mary Seacole for the last three years,
and who immediately recognised the identity of the sitter.
Mary Seacole was born in Kingston, Jamaica, to a
Scottish soldier father and mixed race mother, who ran a boarding
house for invalid soldiers. From her mother she learned nursing
skills and the principles of herbal medicine. With the outbreak
of war with Russia in 1854, Mary Seacole sailed to England and
volunteered herself to those recruiting for Florence Nightingale's
nursing contingent. She was refused interviews with the War Office,
probably because of her ethnicity. Undeterred, Seacole travelled
to the Crimea at her own expense, opening 'The British Hotel'
outside Balaklava. This served as a canteen for troops and a
base for her daily 'surgeries' for attending to the sick and
wounded. She was widely known to the troops throughout the Crimea
as 'Mother Seacole' and soon became a familiar figure on the
battlefield, taking food, drink and her nursing skills to the
wounded and dying. Seacole remained in the Crimea until 1856,
returning to England destitute, after the sudden end of hostilities
left her bankrupt. However, through the support and testimony
of those who had known her in the Crimea, she had become a familiar
figure to British newspaper readers and funds were established
to assist her. Seacole was awarded the British Crimean medal,
the Turkish Medjidie and the French Legion of Honour. Her autobiography
"Wonderful Adventures of Mrs Seacole in Many Lands"
was published in 1857 and sold well. After returning to Jamaica
for several years (1859-65) Mary Seacole died on 14 May 1881
at her home in Paddington, London. Her grave at Kensal Green
Roman Catholic cemetery was re-consecrated at the instigation
of Jamaican nurses who rediscovered it in 1973.
Helen Rappaport brought the portrait
to the attention of the National Portrait Gallery and the work
was closely examined. That it represents Seacole is supported
by its likeness to other known portraits of her - an 1871 bust
by Count Gleichen (Institute of Jamaica, Kingston) and a carte
de visite photograph (Private Collection) - and by details
of her dress, such as the scarf and the medals which she is also
shown wearing in these verified portraits. Technical analysis
of the painting revealed a signature "ACC" and showed
that the portrait contained only pigments consistent with the
date on the reverse. It is also on a colourman's prepared panel
that is also appropriate for the date. The portrait appears to
have been painted over another painting that contains the same
pigments, suggesting it was by the same hand.
Albert Charles Challen, a hitherto
unknown artist, is shown on the 1871 census as living in Hammersmith,
London when he was described as an 'art student (painting)'.
By the time of the 1881 census he was living in Camberwell, London
and described as a practicing artist. He is recorded as having
been born in Islington on 8 October 1847 and died on 1 September
1881, aged 34. Further researches in wills and other documents
by Helen Rappaport have revealed that Challen's widowed father
and unmarried siblings were later resident in Stoke Newington
until the 1920s.
Sandy Nairne, Director of
the National Portrait Gallery, said: "This is a wonderful discovery. A painted
portrait allows us to appreciate the important 19th-century figure
of Mary Seacole in new ways."
Helen Rappaport, owner of
the portrait, said: 'As
an admirer of Mary Seacole's courage and humanitarianism I am
extremely happy that she can at last take her rightful place
in British history as an important female personality of the
Crimean War. For me, the National Portrait Gallery is the portrait's
natural home and I am delighted that it will now be on free and
open access for everyone to see it.'
Mary Seacole by AC Challen is currently on display
in Room 23.
Notes to Editors
- The portrait is 240 x 180mm
and is oil on panel, signed "ACC"
- Helen Rappaport's article on
Mary Seacole will appear in History Today on 20 January
2005.
- The Mary Seacole Bicentenary
will be launched at Guys & St Thomas NHS Foundation Trust
on 25 January 2005. For further details please contact Rudi Page,
Project Manager Tel 020 8861 6167 Email info@statecraft.net
- A new biography Mary Seacole,
The Black Nightingale by Jane Robinson, is published by Constable
& Robinson on 27 January 2005. For further details please
contact Gina Rozner, Tel 020 7792 4701 Email gina@giantroosterpr.fsnet.co.uk
- Channel 4 will be screening
a new drama-documentary by October Films on the life and work
of Mary Seacole in Spring 2005.
- The list of 100 Great Black
Britons was compiled in 2004 in response to the BBC Great Britons
debate in 2003. Further information www.100greatblackbritons.com
For further press information
please contact:
Hazel Sutherland, National
Portrait Gallery Press Office
Tel: 020 7312 2452
Email: hsutherland@npg.org.uk
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