- Portrait of Mrs. Jelf Powis and her Daughter
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Joshua Reynolds was the most influential artist—and one of the most important portrait painters—in 18th-century England. As first president of the Royal Academy in London, he was in a unique position to promote and elevate the status of artists and art in Britain. In his lectures, he urged that modern painting, even portraiture, be based on antique prototypes.
Reynolds seems to have followed his own precept in this portrait: the painter "dresses his figure something with the general air of the antique for the sake of dignity, and preserves something of the modern for the sake of likeness." Although the sitters for this portrait visited Reynolds’s studio several times, the final payment was never made. The painting remained in the artist’s studio until his death.
ProvenanceCommissioned in 1777 by Mrs. Thomas Jelf Powis; not paid for, remaining in the artist’s possession until his death in 1792; [Reynolds sale, Greenwood’s, London, April 16, 1796, lot 41; purchased by “Dodge,” probably for Basil Fielding, Sixth Earl of Denbigh (1719–1800)]; by descent, Rudolph Fielding, Eighth Earl of Denbigh (1823–1892) until sold to Charles John Wertheimer (1842–1911), 1891; Sir George A. Cooper, Baronet (1856–1940), by 1912; by descent; [Christie’s, London, July 16, 1982, lot 73, purchased by the Noortman & Brod Gallery, London]; [P. & D. Colnaghi & Co., London]; purchased by the Sarah Campbell Blaffer Foundation, 1985.
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