The Fashionable Mamma,—or—the Convenience of Modern Dress
Description:
A viscountess sits between a portrait of a peasant woman breastfeeding a baby, the frame of which reads “Maternal Love,\" and a window revealing a carriage waiting outside, its attendant holding its door open. The viscountess wears a loosely fitting polka-dot dress and a large feather headpiece. She sits with a fan in her right hand, which is relaxed alongside her hip, and her with her torso bent slightly forward to the baby nursing from a breast, which is exposed via slits in the dress. Her left hand cups the back of the baby’s head. Her eyes are cast downward and to the side, catching the viewer’s gaze. A maid holds the body of the baby and looks down at the nursing process.
Copyright:
Courtesy of The Lewis Walpole Library, Yale University. Copyright, 2009.
Accession Number:
796.2.15.1
Printing Context
The Fashionable Mamma appeared in Hannah Humprey’s 27 St. James Street print shop for public viewing and sale on February 15, 1796.Associated Events
Jean-Jacques Rosseau's writings made breast-feeding a fashionable practice for the British upper-class (K. Hart, James Gillray 47).Subject
A viscountess sits between a portrait of a peasant woman breastfeeding a baby, the frame of which reads “Maternal Love," and a window revealing a carriage waiting outside, its attendant holding its door open. The viscountess wears a loosely fitting polka-dot dress and a large feather headpiece. She sits with a fan in her right hand, which is relaxed alongside her hip, and her with her torso bent slightly forward to the baby nursing from a breast, which is exposed via slits in the dress. Her left hand cups the back of the baby’s head. Her eyes are cast downward and to the side, catching the viewer’s gaze. A maid holds the body of the baby and looks down at the nursing process.Theme
The newest fashions at the time of this print’s publication included loosely fitting draping dresses and high feather headdresses. The pictorial irony here depends on “maternal love” as a following of popular aristocratic fashion. To leverage this irony, counterintuitive images share the space: the carriage waiting outside on one side of the background and the picture of the peasant woman breastfeeding her child in a natural setting on the other, the fan in one hand and the baby’s head in the other, suggest the gap between the presentation of maternal love as means to follow fashion, and the natural, organic maternal love as a result of necessity. The natural setting of the peasant woman’s portrait versus the fashionable domestic setting of the viscountess further highlights the difference between presented and intrinsic maternal love. While the angle of the maid’s pleasant looking face is mirrored by the attentive face of the peasant woman in the painting, the downcast gaze of the mother is directed not at the baby but at her fan. All of these contradictory images convey the irony in fashionability's convening to maternal love, or rather maternal love's convening to fashionability.Significance
This print speaks to important cultural issues revolving around the relationship between fashion and domesticity. Moral reformers, threatened by the “laxity of manners” and corruptibility that coincided with an over-interest in fashion, deplored the loose draping gowns that put the woman’s body on display (D. Donald, Satirical Prints 102). In that the viscountess does not pretend to truly value her maternal love, and rather uses it to enhance her social, externally fashionable persona, Gillray aligns her true internal personality with the one-dimensional world of presentation, in this way criticizing the shallowness of wealthy aristocratic females in general. For the viscountess, the energy invested in maternal love is not actually in competition with the energy invested in maintaining a properly fashionable upper-class social life (depicted by the loose-fitting gown and the large feather headpiece, the a la mode nursing style introduced by Jean-Jacques Rosseau). The woman can nurse in the antechamber on her way out the door, without time-consuming and hindering change of dress procedures. Thus, the irony of fashion's assistance to maternal love, despite the moral reformers' antagonism of its moral transgressiveness, allows Gillray to satirize not only the shallow woman, but also the reformers’ efficacy.Function
Hannah Humphrey’s print shop not only showed and sold Gillray’s caricatures that mocked the fashion priorities of the upper aristocracy, but also Heidhelhoff’s Gallery of Fashion plates. Caricature of morally questionable aristocratic fashion sought both to sairize and entertain satire and to participate in its dissemination to the masses.Bibliography
Donald, Diana. The Age of Caricature: Satirical Prints in the Reign of George III. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996.Long Title
The Fashionable Mamma,—or—the Convenience of Modern Dress. Vide. The Pocket Hole, & c.Featured in Exhibit:
From the Collection:
Engraver:
Delineator:
Image Date:
15 February 1796
Publisher:
Hannah Humphrey