C.T. after Sir Thomas Lawrence The Calmady Children

Prix ordinaire
€160,95
Prix soldé
€160,95
Prix ordinaire
Épuisé
Prix unitaire
par 

An original 1833 watercolour painting, C.T. after Sir Thomas Lawrence, The Calmady Children.

An enchanting wash drawing after the double portrait of the Calmady sisters by leading portraitist Sir Thomas Lawrence (1769–1830). The execution of the drawing is particularly delicate and closely resembles Lawrence's original.

Lawrence painted the Calmady children, (Emily, 1818–1906, and Laura Anne, 1820–1894), in oil in 1823 (Metropolitan Museum of Art), which he declared to be 'my best picture'. The present watercolour is after a chalk drawing by Lawrence of the same subject, which was engraved a number of times in by Frederick Christian Lewis.

Provenance: Given to Mary Twopenny by her cousin David at Little Casterton in 1832. David Twopenny, commoner at Oriel College, Oxford and lifelong Vicar of Stockbury in Kent, was a collector of art (a sale of his collection at Christie’s included an extensive collection of fine engravings after Turner).

On paper laid down on backing paper.

+ Read the S&W Collection Research

Sir Thomas Lawrence Portraits: Engravings by Frederick Christian Lewis

This picture forms part of a collection of works that we have for sale after the leading British portrait painter of the early 19th century, Sir Thomas Lawrence (1769–1830). The majority are original prints in stipple and soft ground etching by Frederick Christian Lewis (1779–1856)—and as such they represent fine examples of the great talents of both artists.

Lewis produced numerous engravings after Lawrence's crayon portraits, of which he gifted thirty-eight to the British Museum. The stipple and soft ground techniques—of which Lewis was a master—lend themselves perfectly to the faithful rendering of Lawrence's drawings: Lawrence, was, from a young age, a brilliant delineator of the human face in chalk, crayon, pencil or pastel, and this bravura is not lost in Lewis's engravings.

Sir Thomas Lawrence belongs to what is considered the golden age of British portrait painting—the age of Gainsborough, Northcote, Hoppner, Beechey and Reynolds. His drawings are exceptionally confident, spontaneous and intimate, and his resulting portraits are at once both flattering and authentic likenesses.

Frederick Christian Lewis was engraver of drawings to Princess Charlotte, Prince Leopold, George IV, William IV, and Queen Victoria. He executed numerous engravings after the Old Masters and eminent contemporary artists, such as Landseer, Bonington and Danby, for publications such as John Chamberlaine's 'Original Designs of the most Celebrated Masters in the Royal Collection' (1812) and 'William Ottley's Italian School of Design' (1823). His superlative skills as engraver led to his contribution to J.M.W. Turner's Liber Studiorum, a collection of seventy-one etchings with mezzotint, greatly influencing landscape painting.

The portraits in this collection have particular appeal, the sitters being children and young ladies—and indeed in the legendary 'English' salons of 1824–7, Lawrence's pictures of women, and of children, took his viewers by storm. When he first began to exhibit in Paris, towards the end of his career in the 1820s, Lawrence was greeted as one of the great, liberating harbingers of British romanticism, and awarded the Légion d'honneur. His portraits—fluid and flamboyant—can be seen as part of the movement that overturned all the old restrictions of classicism.

+ Artwork Details

Dimensions: Height: 29.9cm (11.77") Width: 22.6cm (8.9")

Presented: Unframed.

Medium: Watercolour

Age: Early 19th-century

Signed: Initialled lower right on backing paper.

Inscribed: Inscribed lower left on backing paper.

Dated: Dated lower right on backing paper.

Condition: In very good condition for its age, with just the slighted age toning in places. Please see photos for detail.

Stock number: JT-163