Arlene
Leis talks to Dr Amber Ludwig Otero about the self-made, seductive celebrity
that was Lady Emma Hamilton
|
George Romney, Head Study of Emma Hamilton as Miranda,
@ The Jean Kislak Collection |
During her lifetime, Emma Hamilton (1765-1815) was
considered one of the world’s great beauties. Men were fascinated by her charm
and good looks, and throughout her lifetime, she formed several important,
romantic attachments with prominent men, including Sir Harry Featherstonhaugh,
George Romney, Charles Francis Greville, Sir William Hamilton and Horatio
Nelson. These alliances helped establish her position in various social
circles, in London and on the Continent, but they also caused her downfall. While
her life echoes the typical rags to aristocracy tale and the artist Elisabeth
Louise VigĂ©e Le Brun, once claimed that ‘The Life of Lady Hamilton reads like a
romantic fiction,’ she was never fully accepted into London society. Emma’s own
tragic end - debt, prison and death in Calais at 49 - reaffirms her reliance on
the men in her life, and it also reveals the restrictions placed on women. Women
could use their beauty to create new opportunities and careers, and in some cases
even influence governance, but they were still chastised.
I spoke with Emma Hamilton scholar Dr Amber Ludwig
Otero about the exhibition Emma Hamilton:
Seduction and Celebrity at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich.