Editor's note: The Chrysler Museum of Art provided source material to Resource Library Magazine for the following article or essay. If you have questions or comments regarding the source material, please contact the Chrysler Museum of Art directly through either this phone number or web address:
America's First Old Master: Portraits by John Singleton Copley from The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
May 21 - August 8, 2004
During the two decades
preceding the American Revolution, Copley emerged in Boston as the most
distinguished of colonial portraitists.
In time, he would be universally hailed as the first great painter in the
history of American art. Opening this May, the Chrysler Museum of Art is
pleased to present America's First Old Master: Portraits by John Singleton
Copley from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The exhibition will run
though August and wonderfully complements the Chrysler own American collection.
(right: John Singleton Copley (American, 1738-1815), Mary and
Elizabeth Royall, ca. 1758, oil on canvas, Julia Knight Fox Fund, Photograph
© Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
Copley's many portraits of influential New Englanders -- merchants, clergymen, lawyers -- were remarkable for their craftsman-like polish and clarity of design. In these works he moved beyond the rococo extravagances of earlier European portraiture to create likenesses that captured the simple strength and moral idealism of the emerging American republic. His talent and fame soon caught the attention of artists in London, where Copley began to exhibit his work in 1766. The lure of London and the Continent eventually proved irresistible for him. In 1774 he embarked on a European tour and the next year settled in London. He remained there for the rest of his life, building a successful European career on the strength of his portraits of the British aristocracy and his ambitious figurative paintings of historical and religious content.
Drawn from the incomparable collection of the Museum of
Fine Arts, Boston, America's First Old Master
features
a trio of major American portraits by Copley dating from the late 1750s
to 1775. The earliest of the three, the charming double portrait of Mary
and Elizabeth Royall, depicts the daughters of Isaac Royall of Medford,
Massachusetts, who was one of New England's richest merchants. The family
resided in a grand Georgian-style home, and as one writer observed, "No
house in the Colony was more open to friends; no gentleman gave better dinners
or drank better wine." With extraordinary fluency and verve, Copley's
portrait of the Royall sisters captures the elegance and ease of their privileged
world. (right: John Singleton Copley (American, 1738-1815), Mr.
and Mrs. Izard (Alice Delancey), 1775, oil on canvas, Edward Ingersoll
Brown Fund, Photograph © Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
Another portrait in the exhibition is believed to represent Mrs. Richard Skinner, wife of Captain Richard Skinner of Marblehead, Massachusetts. Dressed in an elaborate formal gown of imported Spitalfields silk, Mrs. Skinner is shown seated at a mahogany gate leg table, gazing wistfully beyond the frame. In her left hand-beautifully reflected in the highly polished table top-she holds a sprig of Canterbury bells.
The latest and most luxurious of the three works in the
exhibition is the monumental double portrait of Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Izard. The couple, from Charleston, South Carolina,
met Copley in early 1775 while touring in Italy. The artist spent a month
in Naples with the Izards and then returned with them to Rome, where he
portrayed them as elegant Grand Tourists surrounded by symbols of classical
antiquity. Copley was pleased with the portrait, proclaiming it a work that
would "support its merit in any Company whatever." Indeed, his
lavish depiction of the Izards directly anticipates the kind of grand-manner
portraiture he would soon be called upon to produce in London for an aristocratic
British clientele. (right: John Singleton Copley (American, 1738-1815),
Mrs. Richard Skinner (Dorothy Wendell), 1772, oil on canvas, Bequest
of Mr. Martin Brimmer, Photograph © Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
This special exhibition wonderfully supplements the Chrysler's already comprehensive collection of American painting and sculpture ranging from the 1750s to the present day with works by such distinguished artists as Copley, Charles Willson Peale, Benjamin West, Thomas Cole, Winslow Homer, Childe Hassam, and Edward Hopper, among many others. Also included in America's First Old Master is the Chrysler's own Portrait of Miles Sherbrook, 1771, by Copley.
Sponsored by the Masterpiece Society of the Chrysler Museum
of Art, America's First Old Master will remain on view in the Small
Changing Gallery until August 15, 2004.
Editor's note: RLM readers may also enjoy these articles:
Read more articles and essays concerning this institutional source by visiting the sub-index page for the Chrysler Museum of Art in Resource Library Magazine.
Visit the Table of Contents for Resource Library Magazine for thousands of articles and essays on American art, calendars, and much more.
Copyright 2003, 2004 Traditional Fine Arts Organization, Inc., an Arizona nonprofit corporation. All rights reserved.