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{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2023}}
{{short description|English painter and engraver}}
{{for|the English-born American organist and composer|Peter Pelham (composer)}}
{{Infobox artist
| name = Peter Pelham
| image = John Singleton Copley, Peter Pelham (?), c. 1753–1754, reproduction from Letters & Papers of J. S. Copley and Henry Pelham, 1914.png
| image_size = 220px
| caption = [[John Singleton Copley]], ''Peter Pelham'' (?), c. 1753–1754, private collection<ref>Appears as reproduced in {{harvnb|Copley|Pelham|1914|loc=ill. facing p. 5}}, {{harvnb|Frankenstein|1970|p=21}}, and {{harvnb|Rebora|1995|loc=p. 164, fig. 153}}.</ref>
| birth_date = c. 1695
| birth_place = [[London]], [[Kingdom of England]]
| death_date = December {{death year and age|1751|1695}}
| death_place = [[Boston]], [[Massachusetts]], [[British America]]
| nationality = English
| education = [[John Simon (engraver)|John SImon]]
| known_for = Mezzotint portraits
| spouse = {{plainlist|
* {{Marriage|Martha Guy|1719|1729|end=died}}
* {{marriage|Margaret Lowrey|1734|1748|end=died}}
* {{marriage|[[Mary Singleton Copley Pelham|Mary (Singleton) Copley]]|1748}}
}}
| children = 6, including [[Henry Pelham (engraver)|Henry]]
}}
[[File:Peter Pelham - Mather Byles - Google Art Project (detail of signature).jpg|frame|Signature of Peter Pelham in the below engraving of [[Mather Byles]]]]
[[File:Peter Pelham - Mather Byles - Google Art Project (detail of signature).jpg|frame|Signature of Peter Pelham in the below engraving of [[Mather Byles]]]]
'''Peter Pelham''' ({{IPAc-en||ˈ|p|ɛ|l|ə|m}};<ref>{{unbulleted list|{{Cite book|last=Mangold|first=Max|url=https://archive.org/details/dudenaussprachew0000unse_c8b4_6|title=Duden Aussprachewörterbuch: Wörterbuch der deutschen Standardaussprache|publisher=Dudenverlag|year=1990|isbn=3-411-00916-0|edition=2nd|location=Mannheim, Wien, Zürich|page=[https://archive.org/details/dudenaussprachew0000unse_c8b4_6/page/563/mode/1up 563]|language=de|oclc=1244724110|display-editors=etal|url-access=registration|via=the Internet Archive}}|{{Cite book|last=Wells|first=J. C.|url=https://archive.org/details/longman-pronunciation-dictionary/|title=Longman Pronunciation Dictionary|publisher=Pearson Longman|year=2000|isbn=0-582-36467-1|location=London|pages=[https://archive.org/details/longman-pronunciation-dictionary/page/564/mode/1up 564]|type=9th impression, 2007|via=the Internet Archive}}}}</ref> {{circa|1695}} – December 1751) was an American portrait painter and [[Engraving|engraver]], born in England.
'''Peter Pelham''' (''ca.'' 1695<ref>Many reference books give the artist's birth year as 1684, but passages in the Copley-Pelham letters ("Letters and Papers of John Singleton Copley and Henry Pelham", ''Mass. Hist. Soc. Colls.'', vol. LXXI (1914), especially p. 8), make it certain that Peter Pelham, Sr., was born later than 1671. ''The Registers of St. Paul's Church, Covent Garden, London'' (vol. I, 1906) show that Peter Pelham, Jr., and his wife Martha had children beginning with the christening of George Pelham on January 20, 1720. One can infer from these dates that the future artist was born about 1695, when his father would have been in his early twenties. His portrait, painted by his stepson, Copley, presumably from life or from records of his appearance about 1750, is not that of a 66-year-old man. (See Charles Pelham Curtis, ''Loan Exhibition of One Hundred Colonial Portraits'', 1930.)</ref> – December 1751), [[United States|American]] [[limner]] and [[Engraving|engraver]], was born in [[England]], a son of a man named "gentleman" in his will. His father, who died in [[Chichester]], [[Sussex]], in 1756, is revealed in letters to his son in America as a man of some property.<ref>He may have been related to the distinguished Pelhams of Sussex described in Mark Antony Lower's ''Historical and Genealogical Notices of the Pelham Family'' (1873), but the relationship has not been proved.</ref>


==London==
==London==
Born c. 1695<ref>Many reference books give the artist's birth year as 1684, but passages in the Copley-Pelham letters ("Letters and Papers of John Singleton Copley and Henry Pelham", ''Mass. Hist. Soc. Colls.'', vol. LXXI (1914), especially p. 8), make it certain that Peter Pelham, Sr., was born later than 1671. ''The Registers of St. Paul's Church, Covent Garden, London'' (vol. I, 1906) show that Peter Pelham, Jr., and his wife Martha had children beginning with the christening of George Pelham on January 20, 1720. One can infer from these dates that the future artist was born about 1695, when his father would have been in his early twenties. His portrait, painted by his stepson, Copley, presumably from life or from records of his appearance about 1750, is not that of a 66-year-old man. (See Charles Pelham Curtis, ''Loan Exhibition of One Hundred Colonial Portraits'', 1930.)</ref> in [[London]], Pelham was one of several London artists who learned the then new technique of the [[mezzotint]] engraving. Of his use of the medium one writer has said: "Pelham handled the rocker heavily, and so gave to his prints a darker appearance than usual".<ref>Whitman, Alfred. ''The Masters of Mezzotint'', 1898, p. 26.</ref> His father, who died in [[Chichester]], [[Sussex]], in 1756, is revealed in letters to his son in America as a man of some property.<ref>He may have been related to the distinguished Pelhams of Sussex described in Mark Antony Lower's ''Historical and Genealogical Notices of the Pelham Family'' (1873), but the relationship has not been proved.</ref>
Pelham was one of several [[London]] artists who learned the then new technique of the [[mezzotint]] engraving. Of his use of the medium one writer has said: "Pelham handled the rocker heavily, and so gave to his prints a darker appearance than usual".<ref>Whitman, Alfred. ''The Masters of Mezzotint'', 1898, p. 26.</ref> He obviously was well trained as a portrait painter, and he must have had influential connections, for between 1720 and 1726 he produced portrait plates of [[Anne, Queen of Great Britain|Queen Anne]], [[George I of Great Britain|George I]], the [[James Stanley, 10th Earl of Derby|Earl of Derby]], [[Spencer Compton, 1st Earl of Wilmington|Lord Wilmington]], [[John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville|Lord Carteret]], [[Robert Molesworth, 1st Viscount Molesworth|Lord Molesworth]], [[Edmund Gibson]], and others. Why, amidst such engagements, Pelham should have emigrated is mysterious, if, as seems quite certain, the poor schoolmaster, limner and engraver of [[Boston, Massachusetts]], is identical with the well-employed mezzotinter of London. It is possible that he left in disgrace.<ref>See the letter of Peter Pelham, Sr., dated September 12, 1739, in the Copley-Pelham letters.</ref> His portrait of [[Governor of Massachusetts|Massachusetts Governor]] [[Samuel Shute]], painted at London in 1724, was brought, according to plausible family tradition, to Boston to serve as introduction to local celebrities.

He was well trained as a portrait painter, and had influential connections, and between 1720 and 1726 he produced portrait plates of [[Anne, Queen of Great Britain|Queen Anne]], [[George I of Great Britain|George I]], the [[James Stanley, 10th Earl of Derby|Earl of Derby]], [[Spencer Compton, 1st Earl of Wilmington|Lord Wilmington]], [[John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville|Lord Carteret]], [[Robert Molesworth, 1st Viscount Molesworth|Lord Molesworth]], [[Edmund Gibson]], and others. Why, amidst such engagements, Pelham should have emigrated is mysterious, if, as seems quite certain, the poor schoolmaster, limner and engraver of [[Boston, Massachusetts]], is identical with the well-employed mezzotinter of London. It is possible that he left in disgrace.<ref>See the letter of Peter Pelham, Sr., dated September 12, 1739, in the Copley-Pelham letters.</ref> His portrait of [[Governor of Massachusetts|Massachusetts Governor]] [[Samuel Shute]], painted at London in 1724, was brought, according to plausible family tradition, to Boston to serve as introduction to local celebrities.


[[File:Peter Pelham - Mather Byles - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|left|150px|Engraving of [[Mather Byles]], a clergyman, by Pelham in 1732-1739]]
==Boston==
==Boston==
Though various dates for his emigration have been suggested, the record of Peter Pelham's activities at Boston is well established. His portrait of the Rev. [[Cotton Mather]], now at the [[American Antiquarian Society]] in [[Worcester, Massachusetts|Worcester]], was painted as copy for the very familiar mezzotint engraving, reproduced frequently. "Proposals" for printing this engraving were published in the ''Boston News-Letter'' on February 27, 1728. Portraits of several other New England clergymen followed. Pelham was seemingly intimate with [[John Smibert]], who settled in Boston in 1730, for he painted Smibert's portrait and made several engravings after Smibert's works. Such professional labors did not produce a sufficient living for an ever-growing family, and Pelham opened a school at which he taught dancing, arithmetic, and other subjects. His first wife Martha dying in Boston, he married on October 15, 1734, Margaret Lowrey, and after her death he married, on May 22, 1748, Mary (Singleton) Copley, widow of Richard Copley, a recently deceased [[tobacco]]nist originally from [[Limerick]], [[Ireland]]. Their home, school, studio, and tobacco shop were on [[Queen Street (Boston, Massachusetts)|Queen Street]] (ca.1747)<ref>Boston Gazette, or Weekly Journal; Date: 07-21-1747</ref> and Lindall Street.<ref>''A Report of the Record Commissioners of the City of Boston'', XV, 1886, p. 367.</ref> In this household were reared the future artists [[John Singleton Copley]] and [[Henry Pelham (engraver)|Henry Pelham]]. Peter Pelham died without a [[Will (law)|will]].
Though various dates for his emigration have been suggested, the record of Peter Pelham's activities at Boston is well established. His portrait of the Rev. [[Cotton Mather]], now at the [[American Antiquarian Society]] in [[Worcester, Massachusetts|Worcester]], was painted as copy for the very familiar mezzotint engraving, reproduced frequently. "Proposals" for printing this engraving were published in the ''Boston News-Letter'' on February 27, 1728. Portraits of several other New England clergymen followed. Pelham was seemingly intimate with [[John Smibert]], who settled in Boston in 1730, for he painted Smibert's portrait and made several engravings after Smibert's works. Such professional labors did not produce a sufficient living for an ever-growing family, and Pelham opened a school at which he taught dancing, arithmetic, and other subjects. His first wife Martha dying in Boston, he married on October 15, 1734, Margaret Lowrey, and after her death he married, on May 22, 1748, [[Mary Singleton Copley Pelham|Mary (Singleton) Copley]], widow of Richard Copley, a recently deceased [[tobacco]]nist originally from [[Limerick]], [[Ireland]]. Their home, school, studio, and tobacco shop were on [[Queen Street (Boston, Massachusetts)|Queen Street]] (ca.1747)<ref>Boston Gazette, or Weekly Journal; Date: Jul 21, 1747</ref> and Lindall Street.<ref>''A Report of the Record Commissioners of the City of Boston'', XV, 1886, p. 367.</ref> In this household were reared the future artists [[John Singleton Copley]] (son of Mary's first husband Richard Copley) and [[Henry Pelham (engraver)|Henry Pelham]]. Peter Pelham died without a [[Will (law)|will]].


Pelham's descendants included grandson [[William Pelham (bookseller)|William Pelham]] (1759-1827), a bookseller in Boston.<ref>William H. Whitmore. Who was Thomas Pelham? The New England historical & genealogical register and antiquarian journal. Oct. 1872.</ref>
Pelham's descendants included grandson [[William Pelham (bookseller)|William Pelham]] (1759-1827), a bookseller in Boston.<ref>William H. Whitmore. Who was Thomas Pelham? The New England historical & genealogical register and antiquarian journal. Oct. 1872.</ref>

==Gallery==
{{Gallery
|width=200 | height=200
|align=center
|title=Selected prints by Peter Pelham
|Peter Pelham after Sir Godfrey Kneller, John, Lord Carteret, c. 1720, NGA 119651.jpg
|''[[John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville|John, Lord Carteret]]'', c. 1720, after [[Godfrey Kneller]], [[National Gallery of Art]], [[Washington, D.C.]]
|Peter Pelham after Robert Walker, Oliver Cromwell, 1723, NGA 119652.jpg
|''[[Oliver Cromwell]]'', 1723, after [[Robert Walker (painter)|Robert Walker]], National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
|Peter Pelham after Jan van der Vaart, Edward Cooper, 1724, British Museum 1852,0214.274.jpg
|''[[Edward Cooper (publisher)|Edward Cooper]]'', 1724, after [[Jan van der Vaart (painter)|Jan van der Vaart]], [[British Museum]], [[London]]<ref>Reproduced in {{Cite encyclopedia|last=Clayton|first=Timothy|title=Cooper, Edward|date=2004|encyclopedia=[[Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]]|editor-last=Matthew|editor-first=H. C. G.|editor-last2=Harrison|name-list-style=amp|editor-first2=Brian|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford, New York|pages=243–244|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_0198613636/page/243/mode/1up|via=the Internet Archive|volume=13|isbn=0-19-861363-6|oclc=1035751010}}</ref>{{rp|244}}
|Cottonus Matheris (Cotton Mather) MET DT2085.jpg
|''[[Cotton Mather]]'', c. 1727–1728, [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]], [[New York City]]
|Peter Pelham - Mather Byles - Google Art Project.jpg
|''[[Mather Byles]]'', c. 1732-1739, [[Museum of Fine Arts, Houston|Museum of Fine Arts]], [[Houston]]
|William Shirley by Peter Pelham after John Smibert, 1747, mezzotint on paper, from the National Portrait Gallery - NPG-NPG 75 80.jpg
|''[[William Shirley]]'', 1747, after [[John Smibert]], [[National Portrait Gallery (United States)|National Portrait Gallery]], Washington, D.C.
}}


==Notes==
==Notes==
{{reflist|2}}
{{reflist|2}}


==References==
==Further reading==
{{refbegin|30em|indent=yes}}
* "Peter Pelham". ''Dictionary of American Biography''. American Council of Learned Societies, 1928-1936.
;Primary sources
* {{cite book|last=Copley|first=John Singleton|author-link=John Singleton Copley|last2=Pelham|first2=Henry|author2-link=Henry Pelham|date=1914|title=Letters & Papers of John Singleton Copley and Henry Pelham, 1739-1776|url=https://archive.org/details/letterspapersofj00copl/|series=Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society|volume=71|location=Boston, MA|publisher=Massachusetts Historical Society|oclc=1048314507|via=the [[Internet Archive]]}}
* {{cite journal|last=Vertue|first=George|author-link=George Vertue|date=1934|title=The Note-Books of George Vertue Relating to Artists and Collections in England (III)|journal=The Walpole Society|volume=22|at=whole issue|jstor=i40086509}}
;General studies
* {{cite journal|last=Allison|first=Anne|date=December 1947|title=Peter Pelham, Engraver in Mezzotinto|journal=[[Antiques (magazine)|Antiques]]|volume=52|pages=441–443}}
* {{cite book|last=Oliver|first=Andrew|date=1973|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/bostonprintsprin00colo/page/132/mode/2up|chapter=Peter Pelham (c. 1697–1751), Sometimes Printmaker in Boston|editor=Colonial Society of Massachusetts, Boston|url=https://archive.org/details/bostonprintsprin00colo|url-access=registration|title=Boston Prints and Printmakers, 1670-1775|type=conference papers|series=Publications of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts|volume=46|location=Boston, Charlottesville|publisher=Colonial Society of Massachusetts, University Press of Virginia|pages=133–173|oclc=1028858792|via=the Internet Archive}}
;Additional notes
* {{Cite book|last=Burke|first=Joseph|author-link=Joseph Burke (art historian)|url=https://archive.org/details/oxfordhistoryofe0009unse/|title=English Art, 1714–1800|publisher=Clarendon Press|year=1976|isbn=0-19-817209-5|series=Oxford History of English Art|volume=9|location=Oxford|page=[https://archive.org/details/oxfordhistoryofe0009unse/page/178/mode/1up 178]|oclc=1150946106|url-access=registration|via=the Internet Archive}}
* {{Cite book|last=Clayton|first=Timothy|title=The English Print, 1688–1802|publisher=Yale University Press|year=1997|isbn=0-300-06650-3|location=London, New Haven}}
* {{cite book|last=Frankenstein|first=Alfred|author-link=Alfred Frankenstein|date=1970|url=https://archive.org/details/worldofcopley17300fran/|url-access=registration|title=The World of Copley, 1738–1815|series=Time-Life Library of Art|location=New York|publisher=Time-Life Books|oclc=1036936244|via=the Internet Archive}}
* {{cite book|last=Gohm|first=Douglas Charles|date=1978|url=https://archive.org/details/mapsprintsforple0000gohm_x0n6/|url-access=registration|title=Maps and Prints for Pleasure and Investment|location=London|publisher=Gifford|page=[https://archive.org/details/mapsprintsforple0000gohm_x0n6/page/38/mode/1up 38]|isbn=0-7071-0567-6|oclc=1245546044|via=the Internet Archive}}
* {{cite book|last=Hind|first=Arthur M.|author-link=Arthur Mayger Hind|date=1963|url=https://archive.org/details/historyofengravi0000hind/|url-access=registration|title=A History of Engraving & Etching from the 15th Century to the Year 1914|edition=3rd, fully rev.|location=New York|publisher=Dover|pages=[https://archive.org/details/historyofengravi0000hind/page/270/mode/1up 270], [https://archive.org/details/historyofengravi0000hind/page/381/mode/1up 381], [https://archive.org/details/historyofengravi0000hind/page/389/mode/1up 389]|oclc=1035610203|via=the Internet Archive}}
* {{Cite book|last=Rebora|first=Carol|url=https://archive.org/details/johnsingletoncop0000unse_e2m5/|title=John Singleton Copley in America|publisher=Metropolitan Museum of Art, H. N. Abrams|year=1995|isbn=0-87099-744-0|location=New York|type=exhibition catalogue|oclc=1244862408|display-authors=etal|url-access=registration|via=the Internet Archive}}
* {{cite book|first=Richard H.|last=Saunders|date=1995|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Wklq3JItYOgC|title=John Smibert: Colonial America's First Portrait Painter|location=New Haven, London|publisher=Yale University Press|isbn=0-300-04258-2|oclc=31607421}}
* {{Cite book|last=Wax|first=Carol|author-link=Carol Wax|year=1990|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qyVYAAAAMAAJ|title=The Mezzotint: History and Technique|location=New York|publisher=H. N. Abrams|pages=32, 91–96|isbn=0-8109-3603-8|via=[[Google Books]]}}
;Reference books
* {{cite encyclopedia|last=Barhill|first=Georgia Bardy|date=1996|url=https://archive.org/details/dictionaryofart24turn/page/335/mode/1up|title=Pelham, Peter|editor-last=Turner|editor-first=Jane|encyclopedia=[[Grove Art Online|The Dictionary of Art]]|volume=24|location=New York|publisher=Grove's Dictionaries|page=335|isbn=1-884446-00-0|oclc=1033638207|via=the Internet Archive}}
* {{cite encyclopedia|last=Barhill|first=Georgia Bardy|date=1999|url=https://archive.org/details/americannational17garr/page/262/mode/2up|title=Pelham, Peter|editor-link=John A. Garraty|editor-last=Garraty|editor-first=John Arthur|editor-last2=Carnes|editor-first2=Marc Christopher|encyclopedia=[[American National Biography]]|volume=17|location=Oxford, New York|publisher=Oxford University Press|pages=262–263|isbn=0-19-512796-X|oclc=1028039693|via=the Internet Archive}}
* {{Cite book|last=Bénézit|first=Emmanuel|author-link=Emmanuel Bénézit|title=[[Benezit Dictionary of Artists]]|publisher=Gründ|year=2006|isbn=2-7000-3080-X|volume=10|location=Paris|page=[https://archive.org/details/benezitdictionar10bene/page/1093/mode/1up 1093]|orig-year=first published in French in 1911–1923|via=the Internet Archive}}
* {{cite encyclopedia|last=Clayton|first=Timothy|date=2004|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_0198613938/page/474/mode/1up|title=Pelham, Peter|editor-last=Matthew|editor-first=H. C. G.|editor-last2=Harrison|editor-first2=Brian|encyclopedia=[[Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]]|volume=43|location=Oxford, New York|publisher=Oxford University Press|page=474|isbn=0-19-861393-8|oclc=1035754429|via=the Internet Archive}}
* {{cite encyclopedia|last=Coburn|first=Frederick W.|date=1934|url=https://archive.org/details/dictionaryofamer14amer/page/409/mode/1up|title=Pelham, Peter|editor-last=Malone|editor-first=Dumas|editor-link=Dumas Malone|encyclopedia=[[Dictionary of American Biography]]|volume=14|location=New York|publisher=Charles Scribner's Sons|page=409|oclc=1043041678|via=the Internet Archive}}
* {{cite book|last=Hind|first=Arthur M.|author-link=Arthur Mayger Hind|date=1963|url=https://archive.org/details/historyofengravi0000hind/|url-access=registration|title=A History of Engraving & Etching from the 15th Century to the Year 1914|edition=3rd, fully rev.|location=New York|publisher=Dover|pages=[https://archive.org/details/historyofengravi0000hind/page/270/mode/1up 270]|oclc=1035610203|via=the Internet Archive}}
* {{Cite book|last=Smith|first=John Chaloner|url=https://archive.org/details/britishmezzotint03smit|title=British Mezzotinto Portraits|publisher=H. Sotheran|year=1878–1884|location=London|at=pt. 3, pp. 964–978|author-link=John Chaloner Smith|via=the Internet Archive|oclc=679810041}}
* {{cite encyclopedia|editor-last=Vollmer|editor-first=Hans|date=1932|title=Pelham, Peter|encyclopedia=[[Thieme-Becker|Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler]]|language=de|volume=26|location=Leipzig|publisher=E. A. Seemann|page=355}}
{{refend}}


==External links==
==External links==
Line 23: Line 90:
*[http://libmma.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/p15324coll10/id/34677/rec/42 American paintings & historical prints from the Middendorf collection], an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on Pelham (no. 54)
*[http://libmma.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/p15324coll10/id/34677/rec/42 American paintings & historical prints from the Middendorf collection], an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on Pelham (no. 54)


{{John Singleton Copley|state=collapsed}}
{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
{{Authority control}}
| NAME = Pelham, Peter

| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| DATE OF BIRTH =
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| DATE OF DEATH = 1751
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Pelham, Peter}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Pelham, Peter}}
[[Category:1751 deaths]]
[[Category:1751 deaths]]
[[Category:American engravers]]
[[Category:American engravers]]
[[Category:American people of English descent]]
[[Category:British emigrants to the Thirteen Colonies]]
[[Category:Year of birth uncertain]]
[[Category:Year of birth uncertain]]
[[Category:People from Boston, Massachusetts]]
[[Category:Artists from Boston]]
[[Category:18th century in Boston, Massachusetts]]
[[Category:People from colonial Boston]]

Latest revision as of 16:28, 30 March 2024

Peter Pelham
John Singleton Copley, Peter Pelham (?), c. 1753–1754, private collection[1]
Bornc. 1695
DiedDecember 1751 (aged 55–56)
NationalityEnglish
EducationJohn SImon
Known forMezzotint portraits
Spouses
Martha Guy
(m. 1719; died 1729)
Margaret Lowrey
(m. 1734; died 1748)
(m. 1748)
Children6, including Henry
Signature of Peter Pelham in the below engraving of Mather Byles

Peter Pelham (/ˈpɛləm/;[2] c. 1695 – December 1751) was an American portrait painter and engraver, born in England.

London

[edit]

Born c. 1695[3] in London, Pelham was one of several London artists who learned the then new technique of the mezzotint engraving. Of his use of the medium one writer has said: "Pelham handled the rocker heavily, and so gave to his prints a darker appearance than usual".[4] His father, who died in Chichester, Sussex, in 1756, is revealed in letters to his son in America as a man of some property.[5]

He was well trained as a portrait painter, and had influential connections, and between 1720 and 1726 he produced portrait plates of Queen Anne, George I, the Earl of Derby, Lord Wilmington, Lord Carteret, Lord Molesworth, Edmund Gibson, and others. Why, amidst such engagements, Pelham should have emigrated is mysterious, if, as seems quite certain, the poor schoolmaster, limner and engraver of Boston, Massachusetts, is identical with the well-employed mezzotinter of London. It is possible that he left in disgrace.[6] His portrait of Massachusetts Governor Samuel Shute, painted at London in 1724, was brought, according to plausible family tradition, to Boston to serve as introduction to local celebrities.

Boston

[edit]

Though various dates for his emigration have been suggested, the record of Peter Pelham's activities at Boston is well established. His portrait of the Rev. Cotton Mather, now at the American Antiquarian Society in Worcester, was painted as copy for the very familiar mezzotint engraving, reproduced frequently. "Proposals" for printing this engraving were published in the Boston News-Letter on February 27, 1728. Portraits of several other New England clergymen followed. Pelham was seemingly intimate with John Smibert, who settled in Boston in 1730, for he painted Smibert's portrait and made several engravings after Smibert's works. Such professional labors did not produce a sufficient living for an ever-growing family, and Pelham opened a school at which he taught dancing, arithmetic, and other subjects. His first wife Martha dying in Boston, he married on October 15, 1734, Margaret Lowrey, and after her death he married, on May 22, 1748, Mary (Singleton) Copley, widow of Richard Copley, a recently deceased tobacconist originally from Limerick, Ireland. Their home, school, studio, and tobacco shop were on Queen Street (ca.1747)[7] and Lindall Street.[8] In this household were reared the future artists John Singleton Copley (son of Mary's first husband Richard Copley) and Henry Pelham. Peter Pelham died without a will.

Pelham's descendants included grandson William Pelham (1759-1827), a bookseller in Boston.[9]

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Appears as reproduced in Copley & Pelham 1914, ill. facing p. 5, Frankenstein 1970, p. 21, and Rebora 1995, p. 164, fig. 153.
  2. ^
    • Mangold, Max (1990). Duden Aussprachewörterbuch: Wörterbuch der deutschen Standardaussprache (in German) (2nd ed.). Mannheim, Wien, Zürich: Dudenverlag. p. 563. ISBN 3-411-00916-0. OCLC 1244724110 – via the Internet Archive.
    • Wells, J. C. (2000). Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (9th impression, 2007). London: Pearson Longman. pp. 564. ISBN 0-582-36467-1 – via the Internet Archive.
  3. ^ Many reference books give the artist's birth year as 1684, but passages in the Copley-Pelham letters ("Letters and Papers of John Singleton Copley and Henry Pelham", Mass. Hist. Soc. Colls., vol. LXXI (1914), especially p. 8), make it certain that Peter Pelham, Sr., was born later than 1671. The Registers of St. Paul's Church, Covent Garden, London (vol. I, 1906) show that Peter Pelham, Jr., and his wife Martha had children beginning with the christening of George Pelham on January 20, 1720. One can infer from these dates that the future artist was born about 1695, when his father would have been in his early twenties. His portrait, painted by his stepson, Copley, presumably from life or from records of his appearance about 1750, is not that of a 66-year-old man. (See Charles Pelham Curtis, Loan Exhibition of One Hundred Colonial Portraits, 1930.)
  4. ^ Whitman, Alfred. The Masters of Mezzotint, 1898, p. 26.
  5. ^ He may have been related to the distinguished Pelhams of Sussex described in Mark Antony Lower's Historical and Genealogical Notices of the Pelham Family (1873), but the relationship has not been proved.
  6. ^ See the letter of Peter Pelham, Sr., dated September 12, 1739, in the Copley-Pelham letters.
  7. ^ Boston Gazette, or Weekly Journal; Date: Jul 21, 1747
  8. ^ A Report of the Record Commissioners of the City of Boston, XV, 1886, p. 367.
  9. ^ William H. Whitmore. Who was Thomas Pelham? The New England historical & genealogical register and antiquarian journal. Oct. 1872.
  10. ^ Reproduced in Clayton, Timothy (2004). "Cooper, Edward". In Matthew, H. C. G. & Harrison, Brian (eds.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 13. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 243–244. ISBN 0-19-861363-6. OCLC 1035751010 – via the Internet Archive.

Further reading

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Primary sources
General studies
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Reference books
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