Beauty Revealed
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This painting depicts a close-up view of the artist’s own bare breasts, painted with softness and realism. The smooth, pale skin and subtle shading evoke a sense of lifelike texture, enhanced by the luminous quality of the ivory surface. Sarah Goodridge’s skillful use of watercolor emphasizes the gentle contours of the body, lending the miniature an almost sculptural quality.
The piece was likely created as a private token of affection; it is believed to be a personal gift to statesman Daniel Webster, Goodridge’s close friend and possible lover. Though small in size, Beauty Revealed is a significant example of the private, personal art often created by women artists in the 19th century. It invites reflection on the boundaries of public and private spheres in art, and on the complex ways gender, affection, and representation intersected in the early American artistic tradition.
In the 19th-century United States, miniature painting on ivory was considered a ladylike activity. Painter Sarah Goodridge turned this demure ideal upside down when she painted an intimate, closeup portrait of her own breasts as a gift to her presumed lover, pro-slavery U.S. senator Daniel Webster. The image doesn’t just challenge restrictions on elite white women’s sexuality: It also evokes the brutal networks of colonial violence that produced the ideal of white femininity. Webster would have held the palm-sized portrait to view the pale, pink-nippled breasts, accessing the “secret” of the white woman’s sexuality in a game of erotic peek-a-boo. Yet the very ground on which the dramatized paleness and delicacy of the white woman’s body is represented – ivory – was itself acquired as part of the wider transatlantic economy, based on the enslavement of African people. Colonial violence is thus revealed to be foundational to white femininity.
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