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Title:
Children Playing at Doctors
Object name(s):
Oil painting
Brief description:
Oil on canvas. The children here are playing while their mother and grandmother are out of the house; the two children in the centre are pounding bread in a mortar and pestle to make tablets, but the child on the right has taken the game a step further by climbing on a chair to open the medicine cupboard, and is pouring a measure of perhaps poisonous liquid into a glass to administer to the 'patient'. Fortunately, the adults are seen returning through the door, otherwise the patient might become a fatality, an outcome suggested in the right corner of the picture by the doll which has fallen out of her carriage. There is a mirror on the wall which reflects the view to the outside world through the left-hand window.
Collection:
Victoria and Albert Museum
Associated concept:
Children & Childhood
Associated concept:
Dolls & Toys
Associated concept:
Paintings
Content - concept:
childhood
Content - concept:
Children
Content - concept:
Interiors
Content - concept:
Furniture
Content - concept:
Paintings
Content - concept:
Mirror
Content - concept:
Toys
Content - concept:
Clothing
Credit line:
Bequeathed by Joshua Dixon
Current reproduction location:
https://framemark.vam.ac.uk/collections/2006AU9797/full/!100,100/0/default.jpg
Location type:
Thumbnail
Dimension:
Height
Dimension measured part:
estimate
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
44.7
Dimension:
Width
Dimension measured part:
estimate
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
61
Dimension:
Height
Dimension measured part:
frame
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
75.5
Dimension:
Width
Dimension measured part:
frame
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
91.5
Inscription content:
'F D Hardy/1863'
Inscription interpretation:
Signed and dated by the artist on toy cart, lower right
Material:
oil paint
Material:
canvas
Object history note:
Bequeathed by Joshua Dixon, 1886. Hardy's long and successful career was principally devoted to painting happily nostalgic episodes in childhood, most often of a domestic and humorous nature. As with so many scenes of everyday life, this work is intended to be 'read' like a written narrative. The children here are playing while their mother and grandmother are out of the house; the two children in the centre are pounding bread in a mortar and pestle to make tablets, but the child on the right has taken the game a step further by climbing on a chair to open the medicine cupboard, and is pouring a measure of perhaps poisonous liquid into a glass to administer to the 'patient'. Fortunately, the adults are seen returning through the door, otherwise the patient might become a fatality, an outcome suggested in the right corner of the picture by the doll which has fallen out of her carriage. Hardy also uses a device much enjoyed by painters and their audience in the middle years of the nineteenth century - the mirror on the wall which reflects the view to the outside world through the left-hand window.
Object name:
Oil painting
Object number:
1035-1886
Object production date:
1863
Date - association:
Painted
Date - earliest / single:
1863-01-01
Date - latest:
1863-12-31
Object production person:
Hardy, Frederick Daniel
Person's association:
Painter
Object production place:
Great Britain
Place association:
Painted
Physical description:
Oil on canvas. The children here are playing while their mother and grandmother are out of the house; the two children in the centre are pounding bread in a mortar and pestle to make tablets, but the child on the right has taken the game a step further by climbing on a chair to open the medicine cupboard, and is pouring a measure of perhaps poisonous liquid into a glass to administer to the 'patient'. Fortunately, the adults are seen returning through the door, otherwise the patient might become a fatality, an outcome suggested in the right corner of the picture by the doll which has fallen out of her carriage. There is a mirror on the wall which reflects the view to the outside world through the left-hand window.
Reproduction number:
2006AU9797
Reproduction number:
2017KB7906
Responsible department/section:
PDP
Style:
British School
Technique:
oil painting
Technique:
oil on canvas
Text reason:
Collections online record
Text:
Hardy's long and successful career was principally devoted to painting happily nostalgic episodes in childhood, most often of a domestic and humorous nature. As with so many scenes of everyday life, this work is intended to be 'read' like a written narrative. The children here are playing while their mother and grandmother are out of the house; the two children in the centre are pounding bread in a mortar and pestle to make tablets, but the child on the right has taken the game a step further by climbing on a chair to open the medicine cupboard, and is pouring a measure of perhaps poisonous liquid into a glass to administer to the 'patient'. Fortunately, the adults are seen returning through the door, otherwise the patient might become a fatality, an outcome suggested in the right corner of the picture by the doll which has fallen out of her carriage. Hardy also uses a device much enjoyed by painters and their audience in the middle years of the nineteenth century - the mirror on the wall which reflects the view to the outside world through the left-hand window.
Text reason:
Summary description
User's reference:
Reference:
O'Mahony, C., Brunel and the Art of Invention . Bristol: Samsom & Company Ltd., 2006. 64 p. : col. ill. ISBN 1904537502
User's reference:
Reference:
Parkinson, R., Victoria and Albert Museum, Catalogue of British Oil Paintings 1820-1860, London: HMSO, 1990, pp. 118-19

Persistent shareable link for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/e5d7a40b-ac23-3dc1-aeb3-65bc17a11bfb

Use licence for this record: CC BY-NC

Attribution for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/e5d7a40b-ac23-3dc1-aeb3-65bc17a11bfb, Victoria and Albert Museum, CC BY-NC

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