Maria Bell


Lady Maria Bell was an English amateur painter and sculptor who worked primarily in oils.

Life

Maria Hamilton was born in Chelsea, London, the daughter of William Hamilton, an architect from a Scottish family, and his wife, Sarah. She was a pupil of her brother, the painter William Hamilton RA, and also studied under Sir Joshua Reynolds, whose works she copied with considerable skill. She likewise reproduced paintings by Peter Paul Rubens at Carlton House, including The Holy Family, which received high praise.
Around 1808, she married Sir Thomas Bell, a leather merchant and later Sheriffs of [the City of London|Sheriff of London], who was knighted in 1816. His portrait was engraved by William Dickinson after a painting by Lady Bell. Between 1809 and 1824, she exhibited several figure subjects and portraits at the Royal Academy and other venues, including in 1816 portraits of Sir [Matthew Wood, 1st Baronet], Lord Mayor of London, and of her husband. She also practised sculpture, exhibiting two busts at the Royal Academy in 1819.
Lady Bell died at her home on Dean Street, Soho, in 1825. Her portrait was later engraved by Edward Scriven from a miniature by W. S. Lethbridge.