Painting. World artists. Joshua Reynolds (1723-1792)

Sir Joshua Reynolds was in his own day a commanding
figure, whose authority outlived him and who eventually
became a target for Romantic attacks. In Reynolds's day
society portraiture had become a monotonous repetition
of the same theme. According to the formula, the sitter
was to be posed centrally, with the background (curtain,
pillar, chair, perhaps a hint of landscape) disposed
like a back-drop behind; normally the head was done by
the master, the body by a pupil or "drapery assistant",
who might serve several painters. Pose and expression
tended to be regulated to a standard of polite and
inexpressive elegance; the portrait told little about
their subjects other than that they were that sort of
people who had their portraits painted. They were
effigies; life departed.
It was Reynolds who insisted in his practice that a
portrait could and should be also full, complex work of
art on many levels; he conceived his portraits in terms
of history-painting. Each fresh sitter was not just a
physical fact to be recorded, but rather a story to be
told. His people are no longer static, but caught
between one moment and the next. Reynolds was indeed a
consummate producer of character, and his production
methods reward investigation. For them he called upon
the full repertoire of the Old Masters.
Reynolds did the Grand Tour and remained in Rome
spellbound by the grandeur of Michelangelo, Raphael,
Tintoretto and Titian. He acquired a respectable
knowledge of European painting of the preceding two
centuries, and gave at the Royal Academy of Arts -which
he helped to found in 1768 - the famous Discourses,
which in published form, remain a formidable body of
Classical doctrine. In his Discourses Reynolds outlined
the essence of grandeur in art and suggested the means
of achieving it through rigorous academic training and
study of the Old Masters. From 1769 nearly all
Reynolds's paintings appeared in the Academy. Reynolds's
success as a portraitist was so great that he was
employing studio assistants to lay out the canvases for
him and to do much of the mechanical work. The artist's
technique was sound, and many of his works of art
suffered as a result. After his visit to the Netherlands
where he studied the works of Rubens Reynolds's picture
surface became far richer. This is particularly true of
his portrait the Duchess of Devonshire and Her Daughter.
Reynolds's state portraits of the King and Queen were
never successful, and he seldom painted for them. There
is inevitably something artificial about the
grandiloquence of the Classical or Renaissance poses in
which he painted solid English men and women of his own
day, investing them with qualities borrowed from a noble
past. Nonetheless, we owe our impression of English
aristocracy in the eighteenth century to his majestic
portraits, with their contrived backgrounds of Classical
architecture and landscape. Lady Sara Bunbury
Sacrificing to the Graces, of 1783, speaks eloquently
for itself. Among Reynolds's best works are those in
which he departs from the tradition of ceremonial
portraiture and abandons himself to inspiration, as in
The Portrait of Nelly O'Brien, which is aglow with
light, warmth and feeling.
Literature: Book "Western European
art" A.P. Minyar-Belorucheva |