Original Print by Sir Joshua Reynolds-Hand Signed-The Countess Spencer-1723-1792


Original Print by Sir Joshua Reynolds-Hand Signed-The Countess Spencer-1723-1792

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Original Print by Sir Joshua Reynolds-Hand Signed-The Countess Spencer-1723-1792:
$79.99


Early life[edit]

Reynolds was born inPlympton,Devon, on 16 July 1723[1]the third son of the Rev. Samuel Reynolds, master of the Free Grammar School in the town. Samuel Reynolds had been a fellow ofBalliol College, Oxford, but did not send any of his sons to the university.[2]One of his sisters wasMary Palmer(1716–1794), seven years his senior, author ofDevonshire Dialogue, whose fondness for drawing is said to have had much influence on him when a boy. In 1740 she provided £60, half of the premium paid toThomas Hudsonthe portrait-painter, for Joshua\'s pupilage, and nine years later advanced money for his expenses in Italy.[3]

As a boy, he came under the influence ofZachariah Mudge, whose Platonistic philosophy stayed with him all his life. Reynolds made extracts in hiscommonplace Antonius,Ovid,William Shakespeare,John Milton,Alexander Pope,John Dryden,Joseph Addison,Richard Steele,Aphra Behn, and passages on art theory byLeonardo da Vinci,Charles Alphonse Du Fresnoy, andAndré Félibien.[1]The work that came to have the most influential impact on Reynolds wasJonathan Richardson\'sAn Essay on the Theory of Painting(1715). Reynolds\' annotated copy was lost for nearly two hundred years until it appeared in a Cambridge bookshop, inscribed with the signature ‘J. Reynolds Pictor’, and is now in the collection of the Royal Academy of Arts, aged seventeen, entitled,Uffizi Self-portrait

Having shown an early interest in art, Reynolds was apprenticed in 1740 to the fashionable London portrait painterThomas Hudson, who had been born in Devon.[2]Hudson had a collection of old master drawings, including some by Guercino, of which Reynolds made copies.[2]Although apprenticed to Hudson for four years, Reynolds only remained with him until summer 1743.[2]Having left Hudson, Reynolds worked for some time as a portrait-painter in Plymouth Dock (nowDevonport). He returned to London before the end of 1744, but following his father\'s death in late 1745 he shared a house in Plymouth Dock with his sisters.[2]

In 1749, Reynolds met CommodoreAugustus Keppel, who invited him to joinHMS Centurion, of which he had command, on a voyage to the Mediterranean. While with the ship he visited Lisbon, Cadiz, Algiers, and Minorca. From Minorca he travelled to Livorno in Italy, and then to Rome,[4]where he spent two years,[5]studying the Old Masters and acquiring a taste for the \"Grand Style\".[citation needed]Lord Edgecumbe, who had known Reynolds as a boy and introduced him to Keppel, suggested he should study withPompeo Batoni, the leading painter in Rome, but Reynolds replied that he had nothing to learn from him.[2]While in Rome he suffered a severe cold, which left him partially deaf, and, as a result, he began to carry a smallear trumpetwith which he is often pictured.

Reynolds travelled homeward overland via Florence, Bologna, Venice,[6]and Paris.[7]He was accompanied by Giuseppe Marchi, then aged about 17.[8]Apart from a brief interlude in 1770, Marchi remained in Reynolds\' employment as a studio assistant for the rest of the artist\'s career.[8]Following his arrival in England in October 1752, Reynolds spent three months in Devon,[9]before establishing himself in London, where remained for the rest of his life. He took rooms inSt Martin\'s Lane, before moving to Great Newport Street, his sister Frances acted as his housekeeper.[9]He achieved success rapidly, and was extremely prolific.[10]Lord Edgecumbe recommended the Duke of Devonshire and Duke of Grafton to sit for him, and other peers followed, including the Duke of Cumberland, third son of George II,[11]in whose portrait, according toNicholas Penny\"bulk is brilliantly converted into power\".[11]In 1760 Reynolds moved into a large house, with space to show his works and accommodate his assistants, on the west side ofLeicester Fields(now Leicester Square).[12]

Alongside ambitious full-length portraits, Reynolds painted large numbers of smaller works. In the late 1750s, at the height of the social season, he received five or six sitters a day, each for an hour.[11]By 1761 Reynolds could command a fee of 80guineasfor a full-length portrait; in 1764 he was paid 100 guineas for a portrait ofLord Burghersh.[13]

The Age of Innocencec.1785/8. Reynolds emphasized the natural grace of children in his paintings

The clothing of Reynolds\' sitters was usually painted either by one of his pupils,[14]his studio assistant Giuseppe Marchi,[15]or the specialist drapery painterPeter Toms.[14]James Northcote, his pupil, wrote of this arrangement that \"the imitation of particular stuffs is not the work of genius, but is to be acquired easily by practice, and this was what his pupils could do by care and time more than he himself chose to bestow; but his own slight and masterly work was still the best.\"[14]Lay figures were used to model the clothes.[11]

Reynolds often adapted the poses of his subjects from the works of earlier artists, a practice mocked byNathaniel Honein a painting calledThe Conjurorsubmitted to the Royal Academy exhibition of 1775, and now in the collection of theNational Gallery of Ireland. It shows a figure representing, though not resembling, Reynolds, seated in front of a cascade of prints from which Reynolds had borrowed with varying degrees of subtlety.[16]>

Although not principally known for his landscapes, Reynolds did paint in this genre. He had an excellent vantage from his house,Wick House, onRichmond Hill, and painted the view in about 1780.[17]

Reynolds also was recognized for his portraits of children. He emphasized the innocence and natural grace of children when depicting them. His 1788 portrait,Age of Innocence, is his best known character study of a child. The subject of the painting is not known, although conjecture includes Theophila Gwatkin, his great niece, and Lady Anne Spencer, the youngest daughter of the fourth Duke of Marlborough.



Hand Signed in pencil-


Original Print by Sir Joshua Reynolds-Hand Signed-The Countess Spencer-1723-1792:
$79.99

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