Anne Marguerite Hyde de Neuville

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Self-Portrait (c. 1761?-1849), Baroness Anne-Marguerite-Henriette Hyde de Neuville, c. 1805-10. Black ink and wash, charcoal, Conté crayon, and graphite on paper mounted on board. Purchase, New-York Historical Society, 1953.238.

Anne Marguerite, Baroness Hyde de Neuville (born Henriette Anne Marguerite Joséphine Rouillé de Marigny on 10 May 1771 Sancerre - died 14 September 1849 Ménétréol-sous-Sancerre) was a French watercolourist and painter.

Biography[]

Anne Henriette Marguerite Joséphine Rouillé de Marigny married Jean-Guillaume, baron Hyde de Neuville a minister and diplomat, on 23 August 1794 in Sancerre.

She lived in the United States from 1807 to 1820, on a New Jersey sheep farm,[1] New York City, and Washington, D.C.

Her papers are held at Princeton University.[2] Her American Sketches was published in 1807.[3]

Works[]

Economical School La Nouvelle-Orléans (1810-1814)
  • View of Utica from the hotel September, 1807, New York Public Library
  • House of Dupont de Nemours Angelica (NY) 1808, National Museum of Franco-American cooperation, Blérancourt[4]
  • Bridewell, and Charity-School, Broadway, Opposite Chamber Street 1808, The Phelps Stokes Collection
  • The Moreau House, 1809, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston [5]
  • Vue d'amboy et du steam-boat The steamboat the Rariton, 1809, New York Public Library
  • Corner of Greenwich Street 1810, The Phelps Stokes Collection
  • Economical School 1810-1814, Historic New Orleans Collection
  • La Bergerie Farm Hyde Neuville Angelica (NY) 1814, National Museum of Franco-American Cooperation, Blérancourt
  • Le coin de F. Street Washington vis-à-vis nôtre maison été de 1817, New York Public Library
  • The House of James Madison to Montpellier, Virginia 1818, Blérancourt, National Museum of Franco-American Cooperation [6]
  • Home in Washington in 1818 to the French ambassador, Baron Hyde de Neuville, National Museum of Franco-American Cooperation, Blérancourt [7]
  • View of Washington City, 1820, New York Public Library
  • White House, ca. 1820, John Anderton collection


Selected works in the collection of the New-York Historical Society:[8]

  • Seated African American Scrubwoman, 1807–1822
  • Baroness Hyde De Neuville's Cabin on the Eurydice,1816
  • The Hyde De Neuville Cabin on the Eurydice, 1816
  • sketches from the Economical School Series, 1810-1814
  • Portrait of a Cherokee Man, 1820
  • Hudson Highlands from Newburgh Bay, 1807
  • The Cottage, 1813
  • Portrait of an Indian Chief, Red Jacket (c.1758-1830?), 1807
  • Mary, a Squaw of the Oneida Tribe, 1807
  • Portrait of Seneca Squaw and Papoose, Western New York, 1808
  • Incomplete Bridge, Palatine, New York, 1808
  • Portrait of an Indian Chief (Chief of the Little Osage [after St. Memin]), c.1811-13
  • Oneida Family, 1807
  • Portrait of an American Indian Girl of Ballston Springs, New York, 1807
  • Fair American Indian Man of the Buffalo Tribe, Canisteo, New York, 1808
  • Portrait of Peter of Buffalo, Tonawanda, New York, possibly chief Tall Peter, or Peter Blacksnake, 1807
  • Dutch Houses on State Street, Albany, New York, 1807
  • Self-Portrait, c.1805-10
  • St. John's Church, President's Square, Washington D.C., 1822

References[]

  1. ^ "Baroness Hyde de Neuville". Women's Project of New Jersey. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  2. ^ "Baroness Hyde de Neuville Collection 1806-1968". Princeton University. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  3. ^ Anne-Marguerite-Henriette Rouillé de Marigny Hyde de Neuville (baronne) (1807). American Sketches. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  4. ^ Base Joconde: La Bergerie de la ferme de Hyde Neuville à Angelica (N.Y.), French Ministry of Culture. (in French)
  5. ^ "Baroness Hyde de Neuville / The Moreau House / 1809". Cartography Associates. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  6. ^ Base Joconde: La maison de James Madison à Montpellier, Virginie, French Ministry of Culture. (in French)
  7. ^ Base Joconde: La maison à Washington en 1818 de l'ambassadeur français, Le Baron Hyde de Neuville, French Ministry of Culture. (in French)
  8. ^ Hyde de Neuville works in the museum collection, New-York Historical Society

External links[]

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