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Mary Delany

 

Delany, Mary (née Mary Granville, earlier Mrs Pendarves) (1700-1788), letter-writer and wife of Patrick Delany. Born in Wiltshire and brought up by her uncle at Longleat House, she was widowed in 1724. In 1743 she accepted Delany's marriage proposal and returned to Ireland. Her Irish letters provide a lively account of big house society. She was a correspondent of Jonathan Swift, who wrote to her of his growing isolation.

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Portrait of Mary Delany by John Opie, 1782.

Mary Delany (nee Granville) (14 May 170015 April 1788) was an English Bluestocking, artist, and writer.

She was born at Coulston, Wiltshire, a niece of the 1st Lord Lansdowne. In February 1718 she was unhappily married to Alexander Pendarves, a wealthy Cornish landowner considerably her senior, who died in 1724. During a visit to Ireland she met Jonathan Swift and his close friend, the Irish cleric, Patrick Delany, whom she married in 1743. After his death in 1768 she passed all her summers with her intimate friend the Dowager Duchess of Portland, who introduced her to George III and Queen Charlotte.

Contents

Life and Career

In 1771, Delany began to create cut out paper artworks (decoupage) as was the fashion for ladies of the court. Her works were exceptionally detailed and botanically accurate depictions of plants. She used tissue paper and hand colouration to produce these pieces. She created 1,700 of these works, calling them her "Paper Mosaiks [sic]" [1], from the age of 71 to 88 when her eyesight failed her. They can still be seen in the Enlightenment Gallery at the British Museum today.

When the Dowager Duchess died, George and Charlotte gave her a small house at Windsor and a pension of 300 pounds a year.

Frances Burney (Madame D'Arblay) was introduced to her in 1783, and frequently visited her at her London home and at Windsor, and owed to her friendship her court appointment. Delany, in her eighties at this time, had a reputation for cutting out and making the intricate paper mosaics (collages) now in the British Museum. She had known many of the luminaries of her day, had corresponded with Jonathan Swift, Sir Joseph Banks, and Young, and left a detailed picture of polite English society of the 18th century in her six volumes of Autobiography and Letters (ed. Lady Llanover, 1861-1862). Burke calls her "a real fine lady, the model of an accomplished woman of former times".

In the year 2000, her descendant, Ruth Hayden, published a book on Delany's work: Mrs. Delany; Her Life and Her Flowers (British Museum Press).

References

  1. ^ Mrs Delany and Her Circle ,Yale Press ISBN 978-0-300-142792

Bibliography

External Links

  • Example of Mary's paper mosaic at British Museum[1]

Delany, Mary (Granville); Lady Llanover, ed. (1861, 1862). The autobiography and correspondence of Mary Granville, Mrs. Delany: with interesting reminiscences of King George the Third and Queen Charlotte. London: Richard Bentley. http://books.google.com/books?q=editions:LCCN05000901&id=tmAJAAAAQAAJ&source=gbs_book_other_versions_r&cad=8.  (Series 1 in 3 volumes, 1861; Series 2 in 3 volumes, 1862)



 
 

 

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Irish Literature Companion. The Concise Oxford Companion to Irish Literature. Copyright © 1996, 2000, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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