As I was looking for images of “broken” tulips in historic collections the other day, I happened across a series of watercolour studies in the Victoria and Albert Museum, which were the work of Mary Moser.

Illustration of two tulips, one with red, white, and blue petals, and the other in shades of purple, with green leaves.
Mary Moser, Tulip Study (1770) ©Victoria and Albert Museum Collections

Moser was an interesting eighteenth-century artist, who, because she specialised in botanical subjects, has often been dismissed in the (misogynistic) historical record as a “flower painter,” yet who in her own time was definitely something of a pioneer. The daughter of an enterprising – some might say pushy – Swiss father, Moser’s artistic talents were encouraged at an early age, and by the time she was a teenager her work was garnering acclaim among fashionable London circles. In 1758, at the age of just 14, she exhibited a prize-winning ornamental design at the Society of Arts, and the following year was awarded a silver medal by the Society for a much-admired floral composition.

A beautifully arranged bouquet of various flowers, including roses, dahlias, and tulips, displayed in an ornate vase on a wooden surface.
Moser’s medal winning composition of flowers in a vase (1759) ©Society of Arts

With a series of high-profile commissions from wealthy aristocratic patrons, Moser built a successful career for herself in 1760s London. In 1768 she was one of two women elected as founder members of the Royal Academy of Arts, the other being Angelica Kauffman, another interesting artist with Swiss roots. Many eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British women artists followed Moser and Kauffman’s pioneering lead, but not until 1936 was another to be elected to this notoriously exclusionary institution (Laura Knight).

An 18th-century gathering in an art studio featuring a diverse group of men and women, including statues and sculptures displayed on shelves. The scene depicts a lively discussion or presentation, with various attendees in period clothing, showcasing interest and engagement.
Johan Zoffany, The Royal Academicans. 1773 watercolour after a work of 1772. ©National Portrait Gallery. Moser and Kauffman are depicted as portraits on the wall, separated from their male colleagues, excluded from the life drawing class for purported reasons of propriety.

Moser’s work was particularly popular with the British Royal Family: she taught painting and composition to the daughters of George III, and in 1792 received a prestigious commission to decorate a room of the new wing of Queen Charlotte’s Windsor residence, Frogmore House.

A vibrant still life painting featuring a variety of colorful flowers, including roses, lilies, and tulips, arranged in an oval format with a gold frame.
Mary Moser painting in the Frogmore Flower room. ©Royal Collections

Queen Charlotte wanted this room to create the impression of an “arbour open to the skies” and Moser filled the space with flowers, painting garlands and bowers directly onto the ceiling and walls, as well as producing several individual canvases depicting floral subjects. For this work Moser was paid £900: then an enormous sum for an eighteenth-century commission, and the equivalent of around £120,000 in today’s money.

A woman in a blue dress with a red shawl is sitting while holding a paintbrush, looking at the viewer. A still life with fruits is visible in the background.
Portrait of Mary Moser by George Romney (1770). ©National Portrait Gallery

In the same year that Moser was celebrated in this portrait by George Romney, she also produced the series of watercolour tulip studies which I happened across in the V&A online collections.

A detailed illustration of two tulips, one in deep red with white streaks and the other in a soft orange with red accents, with a faint floral background.
Mary Moser, Tulip Study (1770) ©Victoria and Albert Museum Collections

These studies are interesting to me not only as beautiful examples of the work of an enterprising eighteenth-century artist, who in her day achieved considerable success, but also because of the way in which they capture a particular moment in the history of the tulip. While Moser was an artist whose career depended upon the enormous wealth and privilege of aristocratic and royal patrons, her tulip studies were produced during the period of what we might refer to as this flower’s democratisation.

A detailed watercolor illustration of a tulip with white petals and purple streaks, featuring a long green stem and broad green leaves.
Mary Moser, Tulip Study (1770) ©Victoria and Albert Museum Collections

In the seventeenth century, tulip cultivation was a hobby enjoyed only by the very rich: individual bulbs commanded extortionate prices, and, in the gardens of those wealthy enough to plant them, flowering tulips were displayed in the neat rows of formal parterres.

A detailed plan of a landscaped garden design, featuring various geometric patterns, pathways, and planting areas, with a central axis and decorative elements, illustrated in an antique style.

But by the 1770s, a new fashion had taken took hold of the British aristocracy and their increasingly elaborate landscape gardens: the Picturesque. Inspired by the classical landscapes of Nicolas Poussin and Claude Lorraine, and championed by designers like “Capability” Brown and Humphrey Repton, wealthy gardeners began to prize the distant, rambling prospect over myopic views of neat parterres.

An engraving depicting two men surveying a river landscape with a distant tower, surrounded by trees and people in the background engaged in various activities.
Humphrey Repton’s business card

As the quintessential parterre flower, the tulip was, by the latter decades of the eighteenth century, deeply unfashionable. But this decline in popularity among the wealthy meant that tulip bulbs also decreased in price, becoming much more accessible to the pockets of the keen amateur growers who the eighteenth century referred to as “florists.”

A vibrant arrangement of seven tulips in various colors, including red, white, yellow, and purple, against a soft background of greenery and a cloudy sky.
Coloured plate, depicting eighteenth-century “florists” tulips, from Robert John Thornton’s Temple of Flora (1798)

Many British “florists” were originally Huguenot migrants, who had brought a love of tulips with them from France and Belgium where their families had faced religious persecution. Members of the artisanal working-class, these tulip-growing refugees were also skilled stocking makers, textile printers, weavers.

A historical landscape illustration featuring rolling hills, a distant body of water with ships, and figures walking along a dirt path. The scene depicts a lush, green area with trees and a habitation in the foreground.
This view of Edinburgh shows the New Town under construction in 1765, with a line of Hugenot weaver’s cottages in what was then Picardy village, and is now Picardy Place.

Under the hands of the Huguenots, in the tiny back gardens of weavers’ cottages, beautiful tulips began to bloom.

A colorful tulip illustration featuring a single flower with white and red streaks on petals, set against a light background.
Mary Moser, Tulip Study (1770) ©Victoria and Albert Museum Collections

In Edinburgh, a city whose thriving eighteenth-century culture was built around small clubs and societies, Huguenot weavers established an association in the 1770s for the showing of tulips and the sharing of tulip-growing lore. And, as the children and apprentices of these skilled weavers moved west across Scotland and south into Yorkshire and Lancashire during the subsequent industrialising decades, so tulips and tulip growing also followed in their wake. “The fabulous florists’ tulips developed through the late eighteenth and the whole of the nineteenth century were,” Anna Pavord writes, “bred and shown by artisans.”

A watercolor illustration of two tulips, one with dark purple blooms and the other with white petals marked by purple streaks, standing on green stems with leaves against a light, textured background.
Mary Moser, Tulip Study (1770) ©Victoria and Albert Museum Collections

The tulips illustrated in Moser’s studies are classic examples of what is now referred to as the “English florists” type, in the three classes under which they are still categorised, shown and judged “Rosen”, “Bybloemen”, and “Bizarre.”

A botanical illustration depicting two colorful tulips, one with vibrant red and purple hues and the other with green and yellow tones, set against a light background.
Mary Moser, Tulip Study (1770) ©Victoria and Albert Museum Collections

Moser’s watercolours document an important moment in history of gardening, when the growing and showing of tulips was an activity increasingly enjoyed by working people, and gardening had become a rewarding hobby, accessible to all.

A painted illustration of a single tulip with white petals edged in deep maroon, standing upright against a light background. The flower is supported by a slender green stem, accompanied by two green leaves.
Mary Moser, Tulip Study (1770) ©Victoria and Albert Museum Collections
A botanical illustration featuring two tulips, one with white and red stripes and the other yellow with green accents, accompanied by green leaves.
Mary Moser, Tulip Study (1770) ©Victoria and Albert Museum Collections


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Comments

17 responses to “Mary Moser’s tulips”

  1. Thank you so much Kate for this beautiful scholarly article on the women who painted tulips in the 18th century. I am an artist myself and love to read that these women did eventually receive recognition for their exquisitely rendered flower portraits. 😍

  2. barbarajafelice Avatar
    barbarajafelice

    Good morning, Kate. What a wonderful email! As a “Tulip” fan, I appreciated the posting. I am always delighted to find scattered offerings each spring. Thank you! Barbara

  3. Helen Tattersall Avatar
    Helen Tattersall

    Such an interesting article about two pioneering women artists.

  4. Helen Avatar

    A fantastic and interesting read. Thank you for sharing.

    Such beautiful art work, and skill to capture something so delicate, and as you say detailed paintings of tulips at an important time in their development.

  5. The paintings of tulips are all of the “broken” type you described last post. I wonder if these types were part of the “democratization” of tulips you describe? Since they were many years off from discovering the virus.
    I can’t believe how prolific Ms. Moser was. Those paintings are all so incredibly detailed. To paint a whole wing of a royal residence and produce hundreds of flower paintings is really quite mind boggling.

  6. Sally Marlow Avatar
    Sally Marlow

    Thank you for a fascinating read. The colour illustrations are beautiful, your article has inspired me to research, order and plant lots of striped tulips next year come Autumn this year.

  7. Stephanie Stokes Avatar
    Stephanie Stokes

    Thanks so much for sharing this information. loved seeing and reading about the artisan tulips

    >

  8. Lynn McCallum Avatar
    Lynn McCallum

    Thank you for providing awesome alternatives to scrolling! Ahh, at last, a brilliant morning read to tune into. ❤️

  9. Barb Chriat Avatar
    Barb Chriat

    Fascinating and so much color inspiration!

  10. Anne Wheeler Avatar
    Anne Wheeler

    I have enjoyed your tulip studies recently, interesting articles on the botanical artists. Thank you.

  11. I do love these tangential researches which you do. They often resonate with interests of my own and always open up new thoughts and interests. Thank you as always. It’s like having access to another’s strand of excitement. Here in southern France the first peonies are blowsily emerging.

  12. Eli Wongraven Avatar
    Eli Wongraven

    Thank you for an interesting and beautiful post! Moser seems to have followed in the footsteps of Maria Sibylla Merian (1647–1717), who was a naturalist and scientific illustrator known for her detailed studies of insects and plants. She lived a remarkable life for a woman of her time – strongly recommended to look up if not aware of her.

  13. Nathalie Avatar
    Nathalie

    Thank you for celebrating women’s work, women’s talent and enlightening us at the same time.
    I visited the V&A museum and Kew gardens 30 years ago and I still remember both as wonderful places. I wish I was closer.

  14. Laura Wickstead Avatar
    Laura Wickstead

    Kate, Your curiosity and scholarship enrich us all.

    Thank you,
    Laura W.

  15. Shelley Dell Avatar
    Shelley Dell

    This was really interesting to learn about, thank you for taking the time to write this—shelley

  16. Sara Wolf Avatar
    Sara Wolf

    Kate, I think it might be interesting to adapt a broken tulip design for color work.

  17. So beautiful Kate – I love hearing from you x

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