Mary Delany, Physalis,
Winter Cherry, a paper
collage
England, AD 1772-88
One of nearly 1000 'cut
flowers' in The British Museum
In the autumn of 1772 Mary Delany (1700-88)
wrote to her niece Mary Port: 'I have invented a new way of
imitating flowers'. With her eye for botanical detail she
would cut minute pieces of coloured paper and stick them on a black
background to represent each part of a specimen. Occasionally she
touched up the pictures with
watercolour.
Here she has incorporated the real skeleton of a pod case to stick
over the paper seeds. The glue that she used was possibly
egg-white, or flour and
water.
The Winter Cherry,
or Chinese Lantern as it is commonly known, is indigenous to
southern Europe and eastern Asia. It was introduced to this country
during the mid-sixteenth century. Many friends sent Mrs Delany
flowers from their gardens for her to copy and she recorded their
botanical and common names, the place they were found and the date
on each of her 'paper mosaicks'. Most of her
collages were made at Bulstrode, the home of her dearest friend,
Margaret Bentinck, Duchess of Portland, with whom she spent
seventeen summers after Dr Delany's death in 1768. She
created nearly a thousand collages before failing eyesight caused
her to stop in 1782. They filled ten albums, which came to the
British Museum in 1897.
K. Sloan, A noble art: amateur artists a (London, The British Museum Press, 2000)
R. Hayden, Mrs Delany and her flower coll (London, The British Museum Press, 1992)
C.E. Vulliamy, Aspasia: the life and letters (London, G. Bles, 1935)