All Art Painting Art Blog - Oil Painting on Canvas

January 12, 2010

Thomas Gainsborough’s Painting–Self-Portrait

Filed under: Famous Paintings — Tags: , — Acacia @ 10:00 am

Self-Portrait

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1787
Oil on canvas
Royal Academy of Arts, London

Thomas Gainsborough’s Painting–River Landscape

Filed under: Famous Paintings — Tags: , — Acacia @ 9:58 am

River Landscape

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1768-70
Oil on canvas, 119 x 168 cm
Museum of Art, Philadelphia

Thomas Gainsborough’s Painting– Portrait of a Lady in Blue

Filed under: Famous Paintings — Tags: , — Acacia @ 9:55 am

Portrait of a Lady in Blue

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1779-81
Oil on canvas, 76 x 64 cm
The Hermitage, St. Petersburg

Thomas Gainsborough’s Painting–Mrs Sarah Siddons

Filed under: Famous Paintings — Tags: , — Acacia @ 9:52 am

Mrs Sarah Siddons

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1785
Oil on canvas, 126 x 99,5 cm
National Gallery, London

Thomas Gainsborough’s Painting–Mrs Grace Dalrymple Elliot

Filed under: Famous Paintings — Tags: , — Acacia @ 9:49 am

Mrs Grace Dalrymple Elliot

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c. 1778
Oil on canvas, 234,3 x 153,6 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

November 28, 2009

Mr and Mrs William Hallett Painted by Thomas Gainsborough

Filed under: Famous Paintings — Tags: , — Acacia @ 8:11 am

Mr and Mrs William Hallett

Mr and Mrs William Hallett by  Thomas Gainsborough

1785
Oil on canvas, 236 x 179 cm
National Gallery, London

Instinctive, unpompous, drawn to music and the theatre more than to literature or history, and to nature more than to anything, Gainsborough continues to enchant us, as the serious Reynolds seldom can. Suffolk-born, like Constable, he also became, within his means and times, a ‘natural painter’ - albeit of a very different kind. Although he said he wished nothing more than ‘to take my Viol de Gamba and walk off to some sweet Village where I can paint Landskips’, his feeling for nature encompassed much more than landscape. Children and animals, women and men, everything that dances, shimmers, breathes, whispers or sings, look natural in Gainsborough’s enchanted world, so that ‘nature’ comes to encompass silks and gauzes, ostrich feathers and powdered hair as much as woods and ponds and butterflies. But this rapturous manner of painting, in which all parts of a canvas were worked on together with a flickering brush, only appears in mature works, such as this famous and splendid picture.

In his early years in Sudbury, after his training in London restoring Dutch landscapes and working with a French engraver, Gainsborough’s finish was less free. After moving to the resort town of Bath in about 1759, he found a metropolitan clientele, and discovered Van Dyck in country-house collections. Both were to be decisive, and the effects are best judged in his portraits of women sitters, on the scale of life, in which elegance and ease of manner combine with a new, more tender colour range and a loosening of paint texture. In 1774 he moved permanently to London, where he built up a great portrait practice, but also began to paint imaginative ‘fancy pictures’ inspired by Murillo. He never aspired to ‘history painting’ in the Grand Manner. His poetry resides mainly in his brush, not in compositional inventiveness.

It was surely Gainsborough’s own inclination, however, to interpret a formal marriage portrait, for which the sitters probably sat separately, as a parkland promenade. William Hallett was 21 and his wife Elizabeth, n閑 Stephen, 20 when they solemnly linked arms to walk in step together through life. A Spitz dog paces at their side, right foot forward like theirs, as pale and fluffy as Mrs Hallet is pale and gauzy. Being only a dog with no sense of occasion he pants joyfully hoping for attention. The parkland is a painted backdrop, like those of Victorian photographers, yet it provides a pretext for depicting urban sitters in urban finery as if in the dappled light of a world fresh with dew.

Mr and Mrs Andrews Painted by Thomas Gainsborough

Filed under: Famous Artists — Tags: , — Acacia @ 8:09 am

Mr and Mrs Andrews

Mr and Mrs Andrews by  Thomas Gainsborough

1748-49
Oil on canvas, 70 x 119 cm
National Gallery, London

Robert Andrews and his wife Frances Mary, n閑 Carter, were married in 1748, not long before Gainsborough painted their portraits - and that of Auberies, their farm near Sudbury. The church in the background is St Peter’s, Sudbury, and the tower to the left is that of Lavenham church. The small full-length portrait in an open-air rustic setting is typical of Gainsborough’s early works, painted in his native Suffolk after his return from London; the identifiable view is unusual, and may have been specified by the patrons. We must not imagine that they sat together under a tree while Gainsborough set up his easel among the sheaves of corn; their costumes were most likely painted from dressed-up artist’s mannequins, which may account for their doll-like appearance, and the landscape would have been studied separately.

This kind of picture, commissioned by people ‘who lived in rooms which were neat but not spacious’, in Ellis Waterhouse’s happy phrase about Gainsborough’s contemporary Arthur Devis, was a speciality of painters who were not ‘out of the top drawer’. The sitters, or their mannequin stand-ins, are posed in ‘genteel attitudes’ derived from manuals of manners. The nonchalant Mr Andrews, fortunate possessor of a game licence, has his gun under his arm; Mrs Andrews, ramrod straight and neatly composed, may have been meant to hold a book, or, it has been suggested, a bird which her husband has shot. In the event, a reserved space left in her lap has not been filled in with any identifiable object.

Out of these conventional ingredients Gainsborough has composed the most tartly lyrical picture in the history of art. Mr Andrews’s satisfaction in his well-kept farmlands is as nothing to the intensity of the painter’s feeling for the gold and green of fields and copses, the supple curves of fertile land meeting the stately clouds. The figures stand out brittle against that glorious yet ordered bounty. But how marvellously the acid blue hooped skirt is deployed, almost, but not quite, rhyming with the curved bench back, the pointy silk shoes in sly communion with the bench feet, while Mr Andrews’s substantial shoes converse with tree roots. (The faithful gun dog had better watch out for his unshod paws.) More rhymes and assonances link the lines of gun, thighs, dog, calf, coat; a coat tail answers the hanging ribbon of a sun hat; something jaunty in the husband’s tricorn catches the corner of his wife’s eye. Deep affection and naive artifice combine to create the earliest successful depiction of a truly English idyll.

Master John Heathcote Painted by Thomas Gainsborough

Filed under: Famous Artists — Tags: , — Acacia @ 8:05 am

Master John Heathcote

Master John Heathcote by  Thomas Gainsborough

1770
Oil on canvas, 127 x 101 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington

Mary, Countess of Howe Painted by Thomas Gainsborough

Filed under: Famous Artists — Tags: , — Acacia @ 8:02 am

Mary, Countess of Howe

Mary, Countess of Howe by  Thomas Gainsborough

1764
Oil on canvas, 244 x 152,4 cm
Iveagh Bequest, Kenwood House, London

Together with Joshua Reynolds, Thomas Gainsborough was one of the artists who carried English landscape painting to its greatest heights in the 18th century. Portaiture and landscape were the two most important genres in 18th-century English art and became a symbol of national identity. Gainsborough worked in both genres with great success owing to the quality of his work. Indeed, he combined the two genres by using landscape backgrounds for his portraits

Landscape in Suffolk Painted by Thomas Gainsborough

Filed under: Famous Artists — Tags: , — Acacia @ 7:59 am

Landscape in Suffolk

Landscape in Suffolk by  Thomas Gainsborough

c. 1750
Oil on canvas, 65 x 95 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

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