This is a talk I gave at Northampton Speakers for this project:
Speaking to Inform (2006) #2 - Resources for Informing (5:00-7:00 min)
Presentation at audience's level of knowledge; Major points supported by explanation, examples and information gathered in research; At least one visual aid effectively used to enhance the audience's understanding.
I tap into the universal love of gossip and scandal to convey a story of my own ancestors told through the art that survives them. I won Best Speaker and blew the grammarian away with word choices.
2016-10-17 Meet the Ancestors: Speaking to Inform, resources for informing
1. Meet the 6th Great Grandparents
John Musters & Sophia Catherine Haywood
2. 1775-1777
• George Stubbs, Equestrian portrait of John
Musters on his favourite hunter, Pilgrim
• John and Sophia Musters riding at
Colwick Hall, George Stubbs
George Stubbs - Fanny, the Favourite Spaniel of
Mrs Musters, Standing in a Wooded Landscape
6. 1819
Monument by her affectionate husband.
If truth; if goodness, charity,
and grace,
Can in Heaven’s holy record
find a place,
Thy name, Sophia, with an
angel’s pen,
Is traced on leaves of bliss by
saintly men
We all have a great fascination with the lives and struggles of others, often with a touch of Schadenfreude –a pleasure from the suffering of others. The Celebrity gossip industry is worth over 3billion dollars and 60% of us consciously consume it. Tonight, Toastmaster, fellow Toastmasters and most welcome guests I am going to share a few pieces of art of my 6th great Grandparents John and Sophia Musters from Colwick Hall in South Northamptonshire. Art tells more about their marriage than I know about my Parent’s own marriage in contemporary times.
George Stubbs painted six paintings for them around the time of their marriage. John is very much landed gentry huntsman with horse and hound. Sophia, in contrast, is the ravishing well healed urban socialite teenager. The compositions are calming and refined to the extent that white picket fences would not be amiss. Notice the bright red of the huntsman’s jacket and the Sophia’s riding dress define the centre of attention. Sophia looks out on the world, but John looks only on her. Each of the Stubbs might cost £50,000 in today’s money, which is rather a lot to spend on a snapshot of the dog, even if spaniels were fashionable accessories for ladies! If you take the way he looks at his wife and the painting of her pet it suggest he could be Uxorious – devoted or obsessed with his wife and her happiness. Remember the painting of them riding as a couple as I will come back to that
Six year later they are painted by Sir Joshua Reynolds. John, ever the rural squire is now Sherriff of Nottingham, which keeps him busy in the sticks. Sophia has been appointed Lady of the bed chamber to Queen Charlotte and was the toast of the town at court and in London. Notice the contrast between the compositions country v classics! Note the energy is the storm clouds – winds of change? This is three years after their last child, who dies within two months. Those three years were a tough patch for Sophia battling being rundown, depressed, and bored and was sent to the Bath spas to recover. Notice Sophia’s generously exposed bust, the wind tearing at her scarf, hair, and clothes, and the hand feeding of an Eagle. In symbology what does and Eagle often represent? Remember Hebe we will come back to her.
Recall the Stubbs of John and Sophia riding together. For 150 years that wasn’t the case. In 1936 restorers discovered her painted out and restored the original composition. In the 1980s x-ray analysis proved she had been over painted as the Reverend Phillip Storey, but to keep the storey that one was not restored. It is believed that Stubbs himself was instructed to remove her. He took care to ensure his original work could be restored. 18th Century photo-shopping by a badly hurt husband?
There are two original Reynold’s Hebe paintings with only subtle differences of clouds and wind. A powerful secret admirer had Reynolds get the first Hebe back from the Family for his private pleasure. Reynolds did recall the painting on the pretext of finishing touches and handed it over. He passed it off as theft and refunding the monies to John Musters. The rumours and clouded circumstances of the loss of the painting tipped John over the edge and for a time John and Sophia became estranged. To add to the cheek of it Reynolds produces the second paining for his pleasure and exhibits in 1785, taking the risk that John Musters never comes to London and nobody tells him anything either! What is more it was not just one secret admired it was many with names like the Prince of Wales (hint Eagle), the politician Penistone Lamb and Reynolds himself. She was in demand and between them George Romney, John Hoopner, and Reynolds painted her around 10 times, before you count the etchings and prints. She made people happy if not by the lusciousness of her flesh then with the sensuousness of her painted flesh glowing on their canvases. At 55 grand a shot she was a very expensive pin-up girl or playboy centrefold!
They did get back together and Sophia returned to Colwick with one of the Hebe paintings! However, I wonder if John Musters is having the last laugh with her fantastical memorial. The statue depicts Resignation sitting on the rock of ages by Westmorcroft. It brings out the virginal rather than the vampish qualities and makes the statement that despite the afflictions of real life we can be resigned to the will of God. The carvings are her gifts of art, dance, and music. The epitaph is interesting. The first two phrases make it seem like a long shot to get into Heaven’s records, but the case exists. The last phrase is cryptic. Leaves are numerous and short lived, Bliss is rapture, and men are just numerous and perhaps held in good standing. To the end John was clearly uxorious, but affectionately ‘resigned’ to her true nature.
In conclusion I am in awe of the creative artist’s ability not just to capture the moment, like a photographer, but to tell the story of it. To sum up John and Sophia it seems, in the words of Blues man Son House, “Ain’t but one kind of Blues and that consists of the male and female that is in Love”