Historical Portrait Louisa Cooke With Her Dog Mr Quiz In The Manner of George Romney C1802
🖼️ Louisa Cooke Skipping With Her Dog “Mr. Quiz” 🐶⚓️ A Quiet Regency Era Portrait Home Before Battle (circa 1802)
British Provincial School, in the manner of George Romney (1734–1802)
👤 Subject & Medium
A rare and intimate Regency era-period portrait depicting Louisa Cooke outdoors with her named companion dog “Mr. Quiz” 🐾. Wearing a luminous white empire-line gown with red slippers 👠, Louisa is shown in a surprisingly personal domestic moment—skipping lightly while Mr. Quiz stands alert at her side on a lead 🏡. The image offers an unusual “at-home” tenderness for the era, firmly rooted in the Cooke family’s Trafalgar-world context ⚓️.
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🗓️ Date: circa 1802
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🇬🇧 School: British Provincial School (in the manner of George Romney, 1734–1802)
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🖌️ Medium: Oil on panel
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📏 Panel size: 26.6 cm × 20.3 cm
🌿 Composition & Technique
This poised full-length portrait is set within a softly atmospheric landscape 🍃. Louisa’s luminous white dress is placed against a deeper, darker ground to create strong figure-to-background contrast ✨. The composition is figure-led—typical of refined provincial portrait practice around 1800—with careful attention to costume detail and a direct, quietly expressive gaze 👁️.
Mr. Quiz is painted as more than a charming accessory 🐶. Positioned attentively at Louisa’s side, he becomes an emblem of loyalty and domestic steadiness 🏠, reinforcing the portrait’s private, affectionate tone. The work’s restrained modelling and sincere, unforced finish align closely with the broader Regency portrait idiom associated with the Romney generation 🎨.
✉️ Louisa Cooke & “Mr. Quiz” 🐾
What makes this portrait exceptional is its documentary anchoring 📜. Mr. Quiz is recorded by name in Cooke family correspondence. In 1805, Captain John Cooke writes to Louisa:
“I hope Mr Quiz is very well… and that you don’t intend to take him to Exeter with you. I think you should leave him at home to guard the House.” 🏠🐶
This single passage transforms the painting into a rare category: a historically anchored likeness where sitter and companion animal are preserved in both paint and letter 🎨✉️—highly memorable, and unusually verifiable for a domestic portrait of this scale.
⚓️ Historical Significance
Louisa Cooke was the wife—and later widow—of Captain John Cooke, RN (1762–1805) ⚓️, commander of HMS Bellerophon 🚢, celebrated for its conspicuous role at the Battle of Trafalgar ⚔️. Captain Cooke was killed during the action. The Bellerophon later gained enduring historical fame as the ship associated with Napoleon’s surrender 👑.
This portrait captures the “other side” of the Trafalgar story—the home front—offering a quiet, emotionally resonant counterpoint to the epic scale of naval warfare 🕯️. For collectors drawn to objects with museum-grade narrative depth, it is a highly compelling acquisition opportunity 🏛️.
🎨 Artist
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🇬🇧 British Provincial School, circa 1802
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🖼️ In the manner of George Romney (1734–1802) — reflecting the era’s elegant portrait conventions: restrained grace, human scale, and refined domestic sentiment ✨
✍️ Signature
Not signed (typical of many provincial and itinerant British portraits of the period).
🖼️ Framed
Recently fitted in a gilt moulded Larson-Juhl traditional frame ✨ measuring 40.0 cm (H) × 33.3 cm (W) × 4.5 cm (D), glazed with Artglass AR 70 for enhanced clarity and long-term museum-quality display protection.
📜 Provenance
Louisa Cooke (Captain Cooke’s widow); thence by descent until 1961/62; acquired by a Private Collection; Herbert Evans & Co. Ltd., 139 Commissioner Street, Johannesburg (label verso) 🏷️; subsequently Sloane Street Auctions(London); curated by Cheshire Antiques Consultant LTD; exhibited Famous Lord Hill Museum .
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🔎 Verso: chalk inventory/handling numbers “262” and faint “804.”
✅ Why You’ll Love It
✅ Named, documented dog: Mr. Quiz appears in an 1805 letter
✅ Trafalgar connection: Captain John Cooke, RN and HMS Bellerophon
✅ “Before battle” narrative: domestic calm with profound historic shadow
✅ Provenance-led confidence: descent history, international handling, label evidence, chalk numbers 📜
✅ Professional conservation completed: cleaned and restored with formal report
✅ Display-ready presentation: Larson-Juhl gilt frame + Artglass AR 70 glazing ✨
🔬 Condition Report
Professionally cleaned and restored by a Fine Art Conservator based at Williamson Art Gallery & Museum. Treatment included:
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🧼 Removal of surface dirt (Tri-ammonium citrate, 5% in water)
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🧴 Removal of varnish layer (acetone applied through Stoddard’s solvent)
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🩹 Filling of losses and careful levelling
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🎨 Retouching with stable conservation materials
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✨ Re-varnishing using conservation-grade synthetic resin systems
The work retains expected age characteristics for an early 19th-century oil on panel, now presenting with improved clarity, tonal unity, and excellent legibility 🌟.