Suzanne Teriimarama Bambridge (1844–1911) was a leading social figure in Tahiti in the late nineteenth century.[1]

Gauguin's portrait of Suzanne Bambridge, 1891

Life edit

Bambridge was the daughter of Thomas Bambridge and Maraea Haumani O'Connor. Her English father was a missionary in Papeete and Tahitian-Irish O'Connor was his second wife.[2] In 1891 French artist Paul Gauguin, recently arrived in Papeete, secured a commission to paint Bambridge's portrait.

Her great-grandfather, James O'Conner, had been a sailor aboard the whaler Matilda, which had wrecked on Moruroa on 25 May 1792. The crew had survived and reached Tahiti on 5 March. O'Conner and a handful of other survivors declined later opportunities to return to Britain, preferring to settle in Tahiti.

References edit

  1. ^ Russell, Peter (2016). Delphi Complete Works of Paul Gauguin (Illustrated). Delphi Classics.
  2. ^ Tapscott, Robert E. (2017-02-12). "Tapscott Family History: Tales of the South Pacific — The Bambridge Family". Tapscott Family History. Retrieved 2018-08-05.