George Charles Williamson

Portrait Miniatures

Published by Good Press, 2022
goodpress@okpublishing.info
EAN 4057664562203

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ILLUSTRATIONS IN COLOUR.
ILLUSTRATIONS IN MONOTONE.
PORTRAIT MINIATURES. By Dr. G. C. Williamson.

PREFATORY NOTE.

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The Author and Editor desire to express their grateful thanks to Fürst Franz Auersperg, Sir Charles Dilke, Bart., Dr. Figdor, Mr. E. M. Hodgkins, Lord Hothfield, Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan, Lady Maria Ponsonby, Mr. J. Ward Usher, Gräfin Emma Wilczck-Emo-Capodilista, and the anonymous collector, who have so kindly placed their treasures at their disposal, and permitted them to be illustrated in these pages.


The copyright of all the illustrations in this volume is strictly reserved by the author on behalf of the respective owners of the miniatures.

ILLUSTRATIONS IN COLOUR.

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Plate
II. "Queen Elizabeth." By Nicholas Hilliard.
IV. "A son of Sir Kenelm Digby." By Isaac Oliver (1632).
" "Frederick, King of Bohemia." By Isaac Oliver.
" "Queen of Bohemia." By Isaac Oliver.
V. "The Duke of Buckingham." By John Hoskins, the Elder.
VIII. "Colonel Lilburne" (1618-1657). By Samuel Cooper.
" "Viscountess Fauconberg, daughter of Oliver Cromwell." By Samuel Cooper.
IX. "Miss Christian Temple." By or after Samuel Cooper.
" "Rachel Fane, Countess of Bath and later of Middlesex" (1612-1680). By David des Granges.
X. "John Milton." Artist unknown.
XI. "George, Prince of Denmark." By Christian Richter.
XIII. "Viscountess St. Asaph (née Lady Charlotte Percy), second wife of George, Viscount St. Asaph, afterwards third Earl of Ashburnham." By Richard Cosway, R.A.
XV. "Lucy, wife of William H. Nassau, fourth Earl of Rochford." By Richard Cosway, R.A.
XVI. "H.R.H. Princess Charlotte of Wales" (1796-1817) By Richard Cosway, R.A.
XVII. "Henry Tufton, eleventh and last Earl of Thanet" (1775-1849). By Richard Cosway, R.A.
XIX. "The Hon. Edward Percival, second son of John, second Earl of Egmont" (1744-1824). By John Smart (1801).
" "The Hon. Mrs. Edward Percival." By John Smart.
XX. "Earl Beauchamp." By George Engleheart (1805).
XXII. "Mrs. Sainthill." By George Engleheart.
" "John Jelliard Brundish, M.A., Smith Prizeman and Senior Wrangler in 1773." By George Engleheart.
XXV. "Elizabeth, Margaret Caroline, and Antoinette, daughters of John Ellis, Esq., of Hurlingham, Middlesex, and Jamaica." By Andrew Plimer.
XXVI. "Selina Plimer." By Andrew Plimer.
XXVII. "The Sisters Rushout." By Andrew Plimer.
XXVIII. "Mrs. Bailey, wife of Lieutenant Bailey, who was present at the storming of Seringapatam in 1799." By Andrew Plimer.
XXIX. "Sir Charles Kent, Bart., as a child." By Andrew Plimer (1786).
" "Mrs. Dawes." By Nathaniel Plimer (1798).
XXX. "Charlotte, Duchess of Albany, daughter of Charles Edward Stuart by Clementina, tenth daughter of John Walkenshaw" (1753-1789). By Ozias Humphry.
" "Mary, wife of the eighth Earl of Thanet" (ob. 1778). By Ozias Humphry.
XXXI. "Lieutenant Lygon." By John Smart, jun. (1803).
XXXII. "Lady Mary Elizabeth Nugent, afterwards Marchioness of Buckingham, and in her own right, Baroness Nugent" (ob. 1812). By Horace Hone.
" "The Rt. Hon. William Pitt." By Horace Hone.
XXXIII. "Miss Vincent." By Vaslet of Bath.
XXXIV. "The Countess of Jersey." By Sir George Hayter (1819).
XXXV. "Louis XIV." By Jean Petitot, the Elder.
XL. "The Empress Josephine." By Jean Baptiste Isabey.
" "The Empress Marie Louise." By Jean Baptiste Isabey.
XLI. "Catharine, Countess Beauchamp." By Jean Baptiste Isabey.
XLII. "Fürstin Katharina Bagration Skawronska." By Jean Baptiste Isabey (1812).
XLV. "Madame Récamier." By J. B. Jacques Augustin.
XLVI. "Marie Antoinette." By M. V. Costa.
XLVII. "Princess Pauline Borghese." By B. Anguissola.
XLVIII. "Prince Franz W. Hohenlohe." By Heinrich Friedrich Füger.
XLIX. "Portrait of a Lady—name unknown." By Heinrich Friedrich Füger (circa 1790).
L. "Empress Maria Theresia, second wife of the Emperor Francis I. of Austria." By Heinrich Friedrich Füger.
LI. "Marie Theresia, Countess von Dietrichstein." By Heinrich Friedrich Füger.
LII. "Fürstin Anna Liechtenstein-Khevenhuller." By Heinrich Friedrich Füger (circa 1795).
LIII. "Portrait of the Artist." By Giovanni Battista de Lampi.
LIV. "Gräfin Sophie Nariskine." By Moritz Michael Daffinger (circa 1835).
LV. "Portrait of a Lady—name unknown." By Emanuel Peter.
" "Gräfin Sidonie Potoçka-de Ligne." By Emanuel Peter (circa 1820).
LVI. "Portrait of the Artist" (1793-1865). By Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller.

ILLUSTRATIONS IN MONOTONE.

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Plate
I. "Mrs. Pemberton." By Hans Holbein.
III. "Philip II., King of Spain." By Isaac Oliver.
" "Mary, Queen of Scots." By Nicholas Hilliard.
" "Queen Anne of Denmark." By Isaac Oliver.
VI. "Queen Henrietta Maria." By John Hoskins, the Elder.
VII. "Charles II." By Samuel Cooper.
" "John, Earl of Loudoun." (1598-1662). By Samuel Cooper.
XII. "Madame du Barry " (1746-1793). By Richard Cosway, R.A.
XIV. "Lady Augusta Murray, wife of the Duke of Sussex." By Richard Cosway, R.A.
" "Henrietta, Lady Duncannon, afterwards Countess of Bessborough" (ob. 1821). By Richard Cosway, R.A.
XVIII. "Sir Charles Oakeley" (1751-1826). By John Smart.
" "Portrait of a Lady—name unknown." By John Smart.
XXI. "Miss Mary Berry." By George Engleheart.
XXIII. "Rebecca, Lady Northwick" (ob. 1818). By Andrew Plimer.
XXIV. "The Hon. Harriet Rushout" (ob. 1851). By Andrew Plimer.
" "The Hon. Anne Rushout" (ob. 1849). By Andrew Plimer.
" "The Hon. Elizabeth Rushout" (ob. 1862). By Andrew Plimer.
XXXVI. "Charles I." By P. Prieur.
" "Mary, Duchess of Richmond and Lenox" (1623-1685). By Jean Petitot, the Elder (1643).
XXXVII. "Madame Dupin" (ob. 1799). By Jean Marc Nattier.
" "The Countess Sophie Potoçki" (ob. 1822). By P. A. Hall.
" "La Princesse de Lamballe" (ob. 1792). By P. A. Hall.
XXXVIII. "Portrait of a Boy—name unknown." By Jean Honoré Fragonard.
" "Portrait of a Lady—name unknown." By Pierre Pasquier (1786).
XXXIX. "A Grand-daughter of Nattier, the Artist." By Louis Sicardi.
" "La Marquise de Villette" ("Belle et Bonne"). By Garriot.
XLIII. "La Princesse de Lieven (née Dorothy Benckendorff)" (1784-1857). By E. W. Thompson.
" "Queen Hortense and her son, afterwards Napoleon III." (1808-1873). By Jean Baptiste Isabey.
XLIV. "Madame de Boufflers" (1725-1800). By J. B. Jacques Augustin.
" "The Father of Madame Seguin." By J. B. Jacques Augustin.

PORTRAIT MINIATURES. By Dr. G. C. Williamson.

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ARECENT French writer, in referring to the art of portrait painting, exalted it to the highest rank, proclaiming it the greatest of all arts. He then proceeded, by a series of curious antithetical sentences, to set forth his opinion of portrait painting, stating that it was at once the oldest and the most modern of arts, the easiest and the most difficult, the simplest and the most abstruse, the clearest and the most subtle. His statement, it is clear, contained a definite basis of truth, coupled with a certain interesting extravagance of expression. It is quite true that to draw a portrait was the aim of the very earliest of draughtsmen, whether it was that of his companion or of one of the beasts of chase, and whether he carved it on a bone, or daubed it on the wall of his dwelling. The first endeavour, also, of a child, playing with a pencil, or a brush, is to draw a portrait, and the very simplest outline does occasionally reveal that an idea of portraiture is latent in the mind of the young artist. If only simplicity of line is desired, nothing can be more simple, while at the same time nothing is more perfect, than the outline or profile drawing of such a great artist as Holbein, or the work of some of the early French draughtsmen.

At the same time, the subtlety of this draughtsmanship cannot be denied. For complexity and difficulty, portraiture takes a supreme place, and yet, on the other hand, as the Frenchman points out in his antithetical sentences, it is to a certain extent a simple art, and we all know artists who are able with a piece of chalk to suggest an even startling likeness which they would be quite unable to complete into the form of a perfect portrait. Many a painter thinks at first that portraiture is simple and easy, in fact he finds it so, but the older he grows, the more does he realise that the human features are complex in the extreme, and that the variations of expression make the difficulties in the task of portraying them enormous. From very early times, however, there has been a natural desire to have portraits of the persons about us, and to have these portraits in portable form; hence, after a long succession of vicissitudes, has come the miniature.

It is perhaps as well, even though the statement has been made over and over again, to emphasize the fact that the actual word miniature has nothing whatever to do with the size of the portrait. We accept it, however, as implying that the portrait is of portable size, and we shall apply it to such a portrait as can lie in the palm of one's hand, ignoring the fact that the word was originally derived from "minium" or red lead, and has come down to us from the little portraits on illuminated manuscripts, outlined or bordered with lines of red. In two countries especially, the art of painting miniatures has flourished, England and France, and in these two countries there have been schools of miniature painters, and a succession of great exponents of the art, while in the other countries of Europe there have only been now and again painters who have devoted especial attention to this branch of their art, and have taken high position in it. It is more especially an English art, because, although for exquisite grace, charming colouring, and dainty conception, the works of the French miniature painters take a high rank, even they must yield the palm for representation of character to the greatest English painter of miniatures, Samuel Cooper. Moreover, in no country but England has there been such a long series of painters in miniature, extending from the sixteenth-century down to comparatively recent times.