The Hon. John Bowes-Lyon in the uniform of the 5th Black Watch The Hon. John Bowes-Lyon in the uniform of the 5th Black Watch
The Hon. John Bowes-Lyon in the uniform of the 5th Black Watch The Hon. John Bowes-Lyon in the uniform of the 5th Black Watch
About Mabel Lee Hankey (1867-1943)
As Mabel Hobson, she was one of the most successful British portrait miniaturists of late nineteenth century. She exhibited at the Royal Miniature Society, the Royal Society of British Artists, the Society of Women Artists and over seventy at the Royal Academy. She married the marine painter William Lee Hankey in 1889 and began exhibiting professionally under her married name. Her clientele were drawn from the great British aristocratic houses, but her most important commission came in 1905 from the Countess of Strathmore and Kinghorne. She was to paint her daughter, Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, later Queen Elizabeth and then the Queen Mother. The result was exhibited at the Royal Academy and is now in the Royal Collection. Subsequently Mabel returned time and again to paint various family members. In 1923 the Countess commissioned a miniature portrait of Lady Elizabeth in evening dress, it was set in an elaborate, jewelled frame and presented to Prince Albert, Duke of York on their marriage. The painting was kept on the writing desk of the late Queen Elizabeth II in her private sitting room at Windsor Castle. In 1942 Queen Elizabeth commissioned portraits of the Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret, and another portrait of herself.

The Hon. John Bowes-Lyon in the uniform of the 5th Black Watch

£7,850

This is somewhat outside our usual sphere, but it appeals at several levels. It is of course a superb bit of watercolour, technically faultless and effortlessly stretching Mabel’s talents as a miniature painter to a more domestic scale. It is a good military portrait of an officer in the uniform kilt of the Black Watch. Mainly it is an interesting piece of British Royal memorabilia as a portrait of The Late Queen’s great uncle and her cousin who later became Princess Anne of Denmark.  The Hon John Bowes-Lyon (1886-1930) was the second son to the Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne, one of ten siblings and elder brother to Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother. He had an inglorious war, accidentally shooting off his left forefinger, he was invalided home in 1915. Of his five daughters, Anne was the second, although she became the eldest surviving after her sister died in infancy. Her first marriage to Viscount Anson, heir to the Litchfield earldom, ended in divorce in 1948 and she remarried two years later to Prince George of Denmark. Her son inherited the Earldom and became a professional photographer as Patrick Litchfield. Her daughter, also from her first marriage, was the party planner Lady Elizabeth Shakerley whose heirs inherited this painting.

About Mabel Lee Hankey (1867-1943)
As Mabel Hobson, she was one of the most successful British portrait miniaturists of late nineteenth century. She exhibited at the Royal Miniature Society, the Royal Society of British Artists, the Society of Women Artists and over seventy at the Royal Academy. She married the marine painter William Lee Hankey in 1889 and began exhibiting professionally under her married name. Her clientele were drawn from the great British aristocratic houses, but her most important commission came in 1905 from the Countess of Strathmore and Kinghorne. She was to paint her daughter, Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, later Queen Elizabeth and then the Queen Mother. The result was exhibited at the Royal Academy and is now in the Royal Collection. Subsequently Mabel returned time and again to paint various family members. In 1923 the Countess commissioned a miniature portrait of Lady Elizabeth in evening dress, it was set in an elaborate, jewelled frame and presented to Prince Albert, Duke of York on their marriage. The painting was kept on the writing desk of the late Queen Elizabeth II in her private sitting room at Windsor Castle. In 1942 Queen Elizabeth commissioned portraits of the Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret, and another portrait of herself.