Painted portrait of woman in green dress and cloud backdrop.

Mrs. Daniel Hubbard (Mary Greene)

John Singleton Copley

c. 1764

John Singleton Copley was largely self-taught, his only formal training from his stepfather Peter Pelham, an English artist who specialized in mezzotint engraving. He nonetheless garnered considerable success as a portrait painter before the Revolutionary War. The sitter here, Mary Greene Hubbard, was a member of Boston’s merchant class (Copley’s portrait of her husband, Daniel Hubbard [1947.27], is also in the Art Institute collection). Her pose, gown, and background were precisely copied from a British engraving of a noblewoman, yet Copley distinguished the work as his own by capturing the figure’s individual features as well as the surfaces and colors of the luxurious fabrics. A decade later, he left colonial Massachusetts for England to further his career and simultaneously escape the strong political divides among family, friends, and patrons amid the impending Revolution.

Title Mrs. Daniel Hubbard (Mary Greene)
Artist John Singleton Copley
Date c. 1764
Medium Oil on canvas
Style american colonial
Dimensions 127.6 × 100.9 cm (50 1/4 × 39 3/4 in.)