Wikipedia Commons Mrs Q 1820 |
Description from British Museum:
"Mrs.Q is probably the best known decorative print executed by William Blake, primarily due to the large number of facsimile reproduction impressions which were printed of this image in 1806. William Blake’s engraving is based upon a portrait by Francois Huet Villiers. The subject of Mrs.Q is Harriet Quentin, the wife of colonel Quentin and mistress to George IV when Prince Regent. The view in the background is thought to be the Thames at Eton, with the college chapel beyond. The miniature portraitist Villiers had died in 1813, thus this portrait must have had been drawn or painted at least seven years prior to the publication of this plate."
Blake was dependent on commercial engraving for earning a living. There was too little market for his output of creative books to sustain him economically. In 1821 he and Catherine moved to smaller and cheaper flat and he was forced to sell his collection of prints which he had been accumulating since his childhood.
A welcome source of income was the commission in 1820 to engrave a painting which had been created by a popular court painter Francois Villers-Huet. The subject of the portrait was Mrs Q, Harriet Quentin, who had been mistress of George IV when he was Prince Regent. The painter had died seven years previously and George IV had ascended to the throne in 1820 on his father's death.
The publication and circulation of this print was part of the campaign of radical dissent focused on the new king because of his reputation for extravagance and dissolution.
From The Stranger from Paradise: A biography of William Blake By G. E. Bentley Jr:
"One of the ways to plague the Prince Regent was to publicize his infidelities. Another of his mistresses was Mrs Harriet Quentin, often referred to as 'Mrs Q'. The radical print-seller Isaac Barrow commissioned Blake to engrave a portrait by H Villiers of the pretty Mrs Q, and his print was published on 1 June 1820 at the height of the agitation concerning Caroline' attempts (vain, as it turned out) to attend the coronation and assume her title as Queen. Blake was on the fringe of the sensational event and acting as the agent of a notoriously radical print-seller." (Page 365)
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