As part of Austen and Turner: A Country House Encounter, we are proud to unveil a major new portrait commission by contemporary visual artist Lela Harris, known for her sensitive and powerful depictions of figures who have often been overlooked or marginalised by history.

Harris has created a compelling new portrait of Miss Lambe, the only character of African heritage in Austen’s novels, from her unfinished manuscript ‘Sanditon’, which is also on display as part of the exhibition.

Miss Lambe is unique in Austen’s writing: a young, wealthy heiress of African heritage who had a ‘maid of her own’ and ‘was always of the first consequence in every plan’. Her great fortune tempts unscrupulous characters to imagine acquiring her wealth through marriage.

Harris’s portrait of Miss Lambe remains unfinished, echoing both the unfinished nature of ‘Sanditon’ as well as highlighting the historic erasure of women of colour from archival spaces. Detail is concentrated in Miss Lambe’s face and hands, giving Austen’s character life, whilst incomplete areas of clothing reflect the sitter’s untold narrative. Like Austen’s handwritten manuscript, Harris’s technical adjustments can be seen in these unfinished areas.

The portrait’s picture surface has been pieced together using 20th-century stationery from Harewood House. In her preparatory work for this portrait, Harris used the technique of collage to build a picture of Miss Lambe beyond Austen’s unfinished manuscript, imagining the character within the context of Harewood and its complex histories and collections. Through this portrait, Harris bridges the gap between fact, fiction and historical imagination.