Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Frida: The Making of an Icon


Tate Modern

25 June 2026 – 3 January 2027


Tate Modern This week, Tate Modern opens the first major exhibition to explore how Frida Kahlo (1907–1954) became a global icon and a key influence on a generation of artists. Through the lens of the artists she impacted and her own extraordinary work, Frida: The Making of an Icon traces Kahlo’s extraordinary rise from a relatively unknown painter to a worldwide cultural phenomenon. Developed in collaboration with the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, this landmark show examines how Kahlo’s art and life inspired generations of artists across diverse media, movements and communities around the world.

For the first time in the UK in over two decades, visitors are able to experience the full breadth of Frida Kahlo’s evolution. Rarely seen self-portraits are amongst over 30 works by Kahlo, exhibited alongside photographs and personal artefacts. Building on Tate Modern’s 2005 survey show, this exhibition goes further by demonstrating Frida’s impact on art history, presenting her work in dialogue with modern and contemporary artists from across the globe who draw influence from her aesthetic, identity and biography. Together they reveal how Kahlo’s story continues to be reimagined and reclaimed by new generations, cementing her place as one of the most influential figures in the history of art.

The exhibition opens with an exploration of how Kahlo constructs and projected her identity in her paintings and personal style. Through a rich display across multiple media, visitors discover how she visually articulates her many ‘selves,’ from the personal to the political, and the physical to the spiritual. Highlights include a selection of Kahlo’s most iconic self-portraits, including Self-Portrait (With Velvet Dress) 1926 and Self-Portrait with Loose Hair 1938, through which she embraces her Mexican heritage, queer self-image, feminist ideals and experience as a disabled woman. These are presented in dialogue with works by other artists of the ‘Mexican Renaissance’, such as Diego Rivera’s Portrait of Frida Kahlo c.1935 and María Izquierdo’s Dream and Premonition 1947, to illuminate the artistic and intellectual exchanges that shape her practice. They are joined by photographs and archival materials, including Kahlo’s tehuana dresses and treasured possessions from her personal collection.

The heart of the show focuses on the surrealist connections between Frida Kahlo and her contemporaries. While Kahlo famously rejected the label, her work reveals striking parallels with the movement, leading its founder André Breton to declare her “a self-made Surrealist.” Following her first solo show at Julien Levy Gallery in New York in 1938, Breton invited Kahlo to exhibit in Paris, where the French national collection acquired her self-portrait The Frame 1938. Tate Modern presents this work and other highlights including Diego and Frida 1929, Survivor 1938, Memory (The Heart) 1937 and Girl with a Death Mask 1938. Shown alongside paintings and photographs by Latin American artists including Kati Horna and Leonor Fini, Tate Modern examines their shared fascination with motifs informed by surrealism, including masks and skeletons, and a fixation on death and dreaming.

Although Frida Kahlo’s name first appeared in US artistic circles in the early 1930s, her work and image only gained widespread recognition decades later. During the late 1960s, the US Chicana/o movement embraces Kahlo as a powerful emblem of cultural pride and political resistance, celebrating her resilience and creativity. Born from the civil rights era of Mexican heritage, these artists aim to establish a unique identity in America. The exhibition explores how Kahlo’s works such as My Dress Hangs There 1933–8, which captures her ambivalence toward the United States, resonated deeply with Mexican migrants and Chicana/o communities, making her a lasting source of inspiration. The exhibition also foregrounds the work of a new generation of artists working in Mexico in the late 1980s and 1990s. Moved by Kahlo, artists such as Nahúm B. Zenil and Georgina Quintana repurpose quintessentially Mexican imagery and popular traditions to question nationalist ideals, patriarchal structures and gender norms.

The rise of feminism in Mexico and the US during the 1970s and 1980s also sparked renewed interest in Kahlo’s groundbreaking self-representation. Her self-portraits, featuring cropped hair, a faint moustache and masculine attire, as well as her scenes of childbirth and female sexuality, boldly challenged cultural norms. Tate Modern celebrates Kahlo’s lasting impact on women artists across Mexico, the Americas and Europe from 1970 to today. Kahlo’s work is paired with artists such as Kiki Smith, Judy Chicago and Ana Mendieta, creating powerful visual dialogues around identity, violence and the body as nature. The exhibition also highlights several contemporary artists who appropriate her iconography and embody her figure to address issues of race, gender, sexuality and disability, including Yasumasa Morimura, Martine Gutierrez and Berenice Olmedo.

The exhibition culminates by exploring Kahlo’s transformation into a global brand that extends far beyond her art, encompassing her image, style and persona. Featuring more than 200 objects generated by the mass-market production of Frida Kahlo merchandise, a room of ‘Fridamania’ looks at the rise of her commercial legacy. Through the licensing of her likeness and partnerships with major brands, Kahlo’s image was propelled into mainstream culture, appearing on everything from T-shirts and tequila bottles to Barbies and perfume. Fashion and pop culture ephemera are joined by the 1983 publication of Hayden Herrera’s biography of Kahlo, now translated into over 25 languages, which further solidifies Kahlo’s iconic status.

Frida: The Making of an Icon is organised by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, in collaboration with Tate Modern.  Curated by Tobias Ostrander, Estrellita B. Brodsky Curator at Large, and Beatriz García-Velasco, Assistant Curator, International Art, Tate Modern.

IMAGES




Frida Kahlo, Untitled [Self-portrait with thorn necklace and hummingbird] 1940. Nickolas Muray Collection of Mexican Art.



Frida Kahlo
, Self-Portrait (With Velvet Dress) 1926. Private Collection.



Frida Kahlo
, Self-Portrait with Loose Hair 1946. Private collection.



Frida Kahlo
, Still Life (I Belong to Samuel Fastlich) 1951. Private Collection.



Frida Kahlo
, Memory (The Heart) 1937. Private Collection.



Frida Kahlo
, Survivor 1938. Colección Pérez Simón.


Diego Rivera, Portrait of Frida Kahlo c.1935. Los Angeles County Museum of Art.


Julien Levy, Frida Kahlo 1938. © Courtesy Philadelphia Museum of A

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Masterpieces from the Lewis Collection Part IV




 Masterpieces from the Lewis Collection

Pablo Picasso

Baigneuses, sirènes, femme nue et minotaure


Estimate

3,500,000 - 4,500,000 GBP



Monday, June 22, 2026

Circles of Influence: Thomas Cole and the American Landscape Movement


Thomas Cole National Historic Site

 June 20 through December 2026


he exhibition will explore the rapid influence that Thomas Cole (1801- 1848) and his work had on other 19th -century artists, and the role that they collectively played in extending the concept of “America the Beautiful,” still vibrant today. 

The exhibition brings together the work of Thomas Cole with artists he was in direct contact with, including Frederic Edwin Church, Jasper Francis Cropsey, and Asher B. Durand; artist-members of the Cole family, including Sarah Cole and Mary B. Cole; and later painters who were shaped by his legacy and considered part of the artistic movement Cole founded, such as Ralph Albert Blakelock, Albert Bierstadt, Susie M. Barstow, John Frederick Kensett, Mary Josephine Walters, and Worthington Whittredge. 

Thomas Cole galvanized a generation of 19th -century American artists to embrace landscape painting. His depictions of the Hudson River Valley and the Northeastern United States imbued nature with picturesque grandeur and a sense of the sublime, captivating the New York City art world. Through his work and his artistic exchanges with other painters, especially his mentorship of Frederic Edwin Church, Cole inspired what is now known as the Hudson River School of landscape painting. Artists associated with the Hudson River School varied in their painterly style, ambition, travels, and commercial success, yet they shared a sustained engagement with the American landscape as a source of inspiration. 



Thomas Cole, Catskill Mountain House, 1846, oil on canvas, 15 × 23¼ in. Warner Foundation Collection 

The exhibition brings to the public major works from private collections, including Thomas Cole’s iconic painting, “Catskill Mountain House,” 1846, from the Warner Foundation Collection. The collection was assembled by the late pioneer collector and appreciator of American Art, Jack Warner (1917- 2017). 

The Warner Foundation Collection is also lending significant works by Albert Bierstadt and Worthington Whittredge. Susan Austin Warner is lending from her private collection works by Frederic Edwin Church, Jasper Francis Cropsey, and John Frederick Kensett. 

The exhibition also includes a distinctive work by Cole, “Distant View of Boston,” c. 1838-39, from the Collection of J. Jeffrey and Ann Marie Fox. 

“The speed and impact of Thomas Cole’s influence in the 19th century is remarkable, as this exhibition demonstrates,” said Maura O’Shea, Executive Director of the Thomas Cole National Historic Site. “But it is Cole’s devotion to the American landscape–its appreciation, portrayal, and preservation–that has made his influence not only historically important but contemporary in its ongoing impact on artists today.”

 “This exhibition honors the rich history of the home—marking the first time since the Cole Site opened to the public that an exhibition of Hudson River School works is presented in the space that Cole designed within his home to display landscape paintings,” said Amanda Malmstrom, Associate Curator of the Thomas Cole National Historic Site. “The salon-style installation brings to light the diversity of artists associated with the major landscape movement sparked by Thomas Cole, and the intertwined complexity of their artistic exchanges. We hope visitors embrace this opportunity for reflection, a moment to reckon with the history of American national identity and the role art played (and continues to play) in shaping and disseminating it.” 

The exhibition is part of a broader initiative of the Thomas Cole Site titled “Thomas Cole: Painting the Nature of America.” This year, the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, is an appropriate time to recall the pivotal role that Cole played in creating the visual identity of the young nation. 

From October 26 to November 4, 1825, the display of three paintings by Cole – in the windows of Colman’s bookstore on Broadway near Fulton Street in Manhattan – changed the course of American art. The three paintings became an immediate success when purchased by renowned painters John Trumbull and William Dunlap and engraver Asher Durand. The display launched Cole’s career and gave birth to what is now known as the Hudson River School.





Jasper Cropsey (1823- 1900), Autumn on the River, 1877, oil on canvas, 21 x 17 in. Collection of Susan Austin Warner 



Susie M. Barstow (1836-1923), Untitled, 1868, oil on canvas, 6¾ x 9¾ in., Thomas Cole National Historic Site, Catskill, NY, Gift of Raymond Beecher, TC.2012.2 of landscape painting. 

Cole’s work gave America a visual identity reflected in the stillvibrant concept “America the Beautiful.”


Saturday, June 20, 2026

FACE TO FACE Grand Manner Portraits by Reynolds, Lawrence and Batoni

Dickinson, London

17th June to 17th July 2026


Featuring seven spectacular portraits, the show includes both new discoveries and superb examples that have never before appeared on the market.

The concept of the Grand Manner in art was promoted in the famed Discourses of Sir Joshua Reynolds, delivered at the Royal Academy between 1769 and 1790, in which he argued that in portraiture – as in history painting – artists should not merely copy nature, but rather seek to elevate it by alluding to the antique. This, Reynolds explained, ‘gives what is called the grand style to invention, to composition, to expression, and even to colouring and drapery’ (Fourth Discourse, 10 December 1771), which is what this exhibition seeks to show. In the late 18th and early 19th Century Britain enjoyed a period of artistic brilliance, particularly in the field of portraiture, as the Industrial Revolution and trade with overseas territories fostered the creation and elevation of a wealthy middle class, while the Grand Tour inspired aristocratic travellers to collect Old Masters and antiquities to decorate their country estates. 

Contemporary painters, both in Britain and abroad, sought to appeal to sophisticated taste by emulating the poses and styles of the masters, while foreign artists such as Pompeo Batoni in Rome competed with British artists to secure prestigious commissions. Classical sources offered a wealth of inspiration, with artists borrowing poses from antique sculptures of gods and heroes to flatter their educated sitters – as well as those who hoped to feign erudition – or incorporating recognisable classical objects and monuments as a nod to a sitter’s Grand Tour experiences. 

In his 1784 Portrait of Thomas Giffard, Batoni included the socalled Medici vase, an elaborate marble krater which had already featured in a number of his portraits of English milordi. As the vase was transferred from the Medici Villa to the Uffizi in Florence in 1780, four years prior to Giffard’s visit, he may never even have seen it; his tour was brief and no record of a stay in Florence is known to exist. But that is beside the point, and visitors to Chillingham Hall would have been none the less impressed for the factual inaccuracy. 

Reynolds, in his 1777 Portrait of Lady Jean Lindsay, Countess of Eglinton, imbues his sitter with the grace of the muses by painting her with a harp. The setting, an ambiguously classical, open arcade with sweeping crimson curtains, lends the monumental work an additional timeless grandeur. 

And the self-taught prodigy Sir Thomas Lawrence, who succeeded Reynolds as President of the Royal Academy, copied and collected old master drawings and plaster casts after the antique; his painting of the family of Lawrence Charles Cockerell (c. 1817) sets the grouping against a turbulent, Romantic landscape framed by theatrical curtains, while the pose of the mother and infant may perhaps reference Michelangelo’s Taddei Tondo – at the time in the collection of Sir George Howland Beaumont, whom Lawrence had painted some years earlier, in 1808. The elder son at far left, meanwhile, wears a velvet costume that may allude to so-called Van Dyck dress, which also features in William Beechey’s monumental portrait of the Dashwood children of circa 1789. Beechey, like Lawrence, may be quoting the old masters in pose as well as costume: the pose of the youngest child, sitting on a Saint Bernard dog, recalls that of Europa astride the bull that is Jupiter in disguise, flinging her arms high as he carries her off. 

Pompeo Batoni Portrait of Thomas Giffard (1764 - 1823) of Chillington Hall, Staffordshire, 1784 Oil on canvas 249 x 180.4 cm. (89 x 71 in.)

 Pompeo BATONI (1708 – 1787) Portrait of Thomas Giffard (1764 – 1823) of Chillington Hall, Staffordshire, 1784 signed and dated lower right POMPEO DE BATONI PINX./ROM.1784 oil on canvas 249 x 180.4 cm. (89 x 71 in.) 

This magnificent portrait is one of the masterpieces of Batoni’s late portraiture; indeed, it was the artist’s final full-length, executed less than three years before his death. It was commissioned in Rome during Thomas Giffard’s brief Grand Tour (Autumn 1783 to July 1784), when he was just twenty years old. Described by the great Batoni scholar Anthony Clark as ‘among the most beautiful of all Batoni portraits’,1 this portrayal of a young recusant Catholic ‘Milord’ has few equals in the later part of Batoni’s long and successful career. It has, moreover, passed by unbroken family descent at Chillington Hall for over two hundred and forty years, having been exhibited in public only once in all that time, and has never before been offered for sale. We know frustratingly few details of Thomas Giffard’s sojourn in Rome, but it was during this period that he must have sat to Batoni. Giffard’s late father Thomas Peter Giffard had already sat to the artist some sixteen years earlier in 1766, for a half-length portrait which remains at Chillington,2 and his brother-in-law Robert Courtenay Throckmorton (1750 – 1779) of Coughton Court in Warwickshire, had also sat to Batoni in 1772. At this point Batoni was the most celebrated and brilliant painter of all the international visitors to Rome in the second half of the 18th Century.3 He had become the painter of choice for the visiting British and Irish royalty, nobility and gentry, and was in addition the curator of the papal collections and had been knighted by the Pope. The painter Benjamin West, arriving in Rome in 1760, remarked that ‘… the Italian artists talked of nothing, looked at nothing, but the works of Pompeo Batoni’.4 Giffard stands at the foot of a colonnaded staircase, a distant landscape beyond. Holding his hat and cane in one hand and his gloves in the other, he leans nonchalantly against the staircase pedestal, while at his feet lies a loyal spaniel, a favourite motif. The vase behind him is closely based on the Medici Vase, until recently a famous attraction in the Villa Medici, but moved to the Uffizi Florence in 1780, four years prior to Giffard’s visit. Its inclusion is intended to underline the classical erudition of his sitters. The Giffard full-length has always been regarded as one of the finest of this last phase of Batoni’s career, described by Anthony Clark as ‘magnificent’. By this time he painted it Batoni was seventy-six years old, in imperfect health and relying on studio assistance for secondary areas of his portraiture. Clark, for example, suggested that the architectural surroundings and distant vista in this work were painted with studio assistance, and, as Bowron points out, this may also explain the curious errors in the depiction of the Medici Vase.

Sir William Beechey The Dashwood children, c. 1789 Oil on canvas 182.2 x 182.8 cm. (71 ¾ x 72 in.)

Sir William BEECHEY, R.A. (1753 – 1839) The Dashwood children, c. 1789 oil on canvas 182.2 x 182.8 cm. (71 ¾ x 72 in.) 

This painting is one of the masterpieces of Sir William Beechey, and it hung in the celebrated dining room at Kirtlington Park. Sir Henry Watkin Dashwood, 3rd Bt., inherited the baronetcy on 10 November 1779. He presumably commissioned this spirited portrait of his children playing with their Saint Bernard around 1789, the year his first payment to Beechey is recorded. At far left, his son Charles sits astride the large dog, hands thrown up in delight. Charles’ sister Anna (later Lady Ely) gently supports him, smiling at her eldest brother Henry, at far right in red. On the ground, embracing the dog, is George, later 4th Bt. due to Henry’s premature death in 1803. The portrait hung firstly at Kirtlington Park in Oxfordshire, a Palladian mansion set in grounds designed by Capability Brown, and then at Duns Tew Manor House. Shortly after it was sold by the Dashwood family, the painting was acquired by the Toledo Museum of Art. Because Beechey’s meticulous account books survive, many of his paintings can be traced to their original commissions. This group portrait first appeared in Beechey’s records from 1789 as ‘Sir H. Dashwood (paid half) £52 s. 10 d. 0’. Later, an entry under ‘Pictures Painted and Moneys Received’ from 14 August 1818 reveals that the remainder of the painting’s price had finally been paid: ‘Of Sir Henry Dashwood (as last half), for his family, painted twenty-five years ago 42 s. 0 d. 0’ (W. Roberts, op. cit.). 

Sir William Beechey Richard Temple-Nugent-Brydges-Chandos-Grenville, future 2nd Marquess of Buckingham and 1st Duke of Buckingham (1776 - 1839), c. 1802 Oil on canvas 76.8 x 63.4 cm. (30 ¼ x 25 in.)

Sir William BEECHEY, R.A. (1753 – 1839) Richard Temple-Nugent-Brydges-Chandos-Grenville, future 2 nd Marquess of Buckingham and 1 st Duke of Buckingham and Chandos (1776 – 1839), when he was Earl Temple, c. 1802 oil on canvas 76.8 x 63.4 cm. (30 ¼ x 25 in.) 

The sitter was the eldest son of George Nugent-Temple-Grenville, 1st Marquess of Buckingham, and the grandson of George Grenville, who served as Prime Minister from 1763-65 early in the reign of George III. He was educated at Brasenose College, Oxford, where he matriculated in 1791. As Earl Temple, he was elected MP for Buckinghamshire in 1797 and held a series of positions including Privy Counsellor (1806) and Vice-President of the Board of Trade. In 1813, he left the House of Commons upon succeeding his father in the marquessate. He was appointed a Knight of the Garter in 1820 and further honoured when he was made Earl Temple of Stowe two years later. He served as Lord-Lieutenant of Buckinghamshire from 1813-39. In April 1796, when Earl Temple, the sitter married Lady Anne Brydges, daughter and sole heir of the late James Brydges, 3rd Duke of Chandos. Earl Temple added his wife’s family names to his own by royal license dated 15 November 1799, and thus the full family name became unusually quintuple-barreled. A full-length version of this portrait by Beechey is at Stowe House, the historic family seat in Buckinghamshire. Beechey also painted other members of the family, including the 1st Duke’s father, George Nugent-Temple-Grenville, 1st Marquess of Buckingham (1753 – 1813), whom this portrait was once thought to represent, and Anna Eliza, Duchess of Buckingham and Chandos, with her son, the future 2nd Duke. Interestingly, the youngest of Beechey’s eighteen children, Richard, had Brydges as a middle name, suggesting a close relationship of friendship with the Duke’s family. 

Sir Thomas Lawrence P.R.A. Portrait of Sir Charles Cockerell and his family, c. 1817 Oil on canvas 237.5 x 168.3 cm (93 ½ x 66 ¼ in.)

Sir Thomas LAWRENCE, P.R.A., F.S.A. (1769 – 1830) Portrait of Sir Charles Cockerell and his family, c. 1817 oil on canvas 237.5 x 168.3 cm (93 ½ x 66 ¼ in.) 

This life-sized family group, painted by Sir Thomas Lawrence in about 1817, is a prime example of his artistic practice as executed on a grand scale. To have any portrait painted by Lawrence was a great signifier of status, but to commission a family portrait on a monumental scale, in the ‘grand manner’, would have been accepted as a serious statement, not just of wealth and position, but of artistic and cultural intention. The Cockerell portrait is a tour de force of Lawrentian painting; Lawrence was capable of seemingly effortless and dazzling brushwork, put to good use here. The portrait was commissioned by Sir Charles Cockerell, who had made his fortune in Calcutta, before returning to Britain and raising a family. In many ways, this is a very modern painting. The focus of the portrait is firmly on Sir Charles’ wife, Harriet, and her maternal role within the family. It is her gaze that meets the viewer and not that of Sir Charles, who attends to the right of the canvas, looking proudly at his youngest daughter in his wife’s lap. Lawrence always sought to animate his portraits with lively, dynamic poses and compositions, and this portrait is no different. The children are shown behaving as children really do; their son plays with a whip, and the elder daughter looks shyly at the viewer whilst the younger sister squirms on her mother’s knee. Lawrence, along with his predecessors Gainsborough and Reynolds, pioneered this new depicting childhood as a distinct stage in life, in a markedly different approach to portraitists of previous generations who often painted children as adults in miniature. 

Attributed to Sir Thomas Lawrence P.R.A. Portrait of a Lady , c. 1801-06 Oil on canvas 76 x 64 cm. (29 ¾ x 25 ¼ in.)

Sir Thomas LAWRENCE, P.R.A. (1769 – 1830) Portrait of a lady, c. 1801-06 oil on canvas 76 x 64 cm (29 ¾ x 25 ¼ in.) . 

This exquisite portrait of an elegant, unknown lady by Sir Thomas Lawrence was painted when the artist was at the height of his powers. It exemplifies his ability to give his portraiture a lyrical dimension, achieved here through the inclusion of an evocative, nocturnal wooded landscape background seen through the velvet curtains. The composition compares closely with those of two portraits from same period: Portrait of Louisa, Lady Wheatley and Portrait of Mrs Jeffrey Prendergast. Both sitters wear the same white dress and gold necklace, and their hands and arms are arranged in the same way as in ours. In our picture the lower edge of the canvas crops the sitter’s hand, which contains a small pentiment wherein it is possible to see two positions for the lady’s left wrist. This suggests our picture might have been painted fractionally before the Wheatley one, which Kenneth Garlick dates to around 1806 (the sitter wed that year), whilst the Prendergast picture was begun in 1801. Although Lawrence never worked as a painter of pure landscapes, he worked them into the majority of his pictures as vignettes, sometimes choosing a recognizable view. He usually included a turbulent sky to add to add a sublime dimension to a painting. Whilst these conventions were relatively commonplace in British landscape of the period, Lawrence’s backgrounds are painted with a vivacity and an individual flair the like of which is perhaps found only in portraits by Gainsborough, who was, unlike Lawrence, a landscapist in his own right. We are grateful to Dr Frédéric Ogée and Dr Brian Allen for independently confirming the attribution to Sir Thomas Lawrence based on first-hand inspection. 

Sir Thomas Lawrence P.R.A. Portrait of The Rt. Hon. Sylvester Douglas Oil on canvas 129 x 103.5 cm

Sir Thomas LAWRENCE, P.R.A. (1769 – 1830) Portrait of the Rt. Hon. Sylvester Douglas, Later Baron Glenbervie of Kincardine, c. 1792-93 oil on canvas 129 x 103.5 cm. (50 ¾ x 40 ½ in.) 

This sensitive portrait of Sylvester Douglas, politician, diarist, and from 1800, Baron Glenbervie of Kincardine, was painted by Sir Thomas Lawrence circa 1792 and exhibited the same year at the Royal Academy. Douglas is shown in a professional capacity as a barrister and King’s Counsel; his most recent case brief lies on the table, loosely bound in its traditional red ribbon. Lawrence portrays him as a man of integrity and intelligence, dedicated to his profession. Douglas served as Chief Secretary for Ireland between 1793 and 1794. From 1778 he reported Lord Mansfield’s judicial decisions in King’s Bench, published in 1783. He was elected FSA in 1781 and FRS 1795. Douglas’s progression was undoubtedly assisted by his marriage in 1789 to Catherine Anne North (1760 – 1817), eldest daughter of Frederick North, 2nd Earl of Guilford and Prime Minister from 1770-82. In January 1800, Douglas was appointed governor to the Cape, and on 30 November the same year he was created Lord Glenbervie of Kincardine in the Irish peerage. For the next fifteen years, he was an active member of both the English and Irish parliaments, which he vividly documented in his diaries. These, together with his journals, published piecemeal in 1910 and 1928, provide a record of his aspirations and disappointments, interlaced with scandalous anecdotes, political gossip, and travel notes. After the death of his wife in 1817 and his son in 1819, Lord Glenbervie turned to literary pursuits, publishing his translation of an excerpt from the Italian poet Fortiguerri’s Ricciardetto in 1822. He died the following year at Cheltenham on 2 May 1823, whereupon his title became extinct. 

Sir Joshua Reynolds, P.R.A. Lady Jean Lindsay, Countess of Eglinton (1756 - 1778), 1777 Oil on canvas 198.1 x 147.3 cm. (78 x 58 in.)

Sir Joshua REYNOLDS, P.R.A. (1723 – 1792) Lady Jean Lindsay, Countess of Eglinton (1756 – 1778), 1777 oil on canvas 198.1 x 147.3 cm. (78 x 58 in.) 

This luminous full-length portrait by Sir Joshua Reynolds of the beautiful Lady Jean Lindsay, Countess of Eglinton, is considered one of the greatest of the artist’s masterpieces remaining in private hands. Reynolds’ beautiful subject, aged twenty-one, is seated in a classical arcade with a landscape beyond, playing the harp as an allegory of Music. Lady Jean Lindsay was the eldest daughter of George Lindsay-Crawford, 21st Earl of Crawford, 5 th Earl of Lindsay. Her marriage, at sixteen, to Archibald Montgomerie, 11th Earl of Eglinton, joined two of Scotland’s most powerful families. Both the Lindsay and Eglinton families commissioned Reynolds to paint full-length versions of Lady Jean, firstly one for her husband Lord Eglinton (now Koriyama Art Museum, Japan), and then this version for her father, Lord Crawford. Both versions are recorded in his ledgers. Although the two versions are similar, the Lindsay version is noted for its superior and more confident execution. It has, furthermore, avoided the paint deterioration and over restoration often seen in other works by Reynolds. Reynolds recorded a total of eleven appointments with ‘Lady Eglinton’ in his pocketbook, the first taking place at 1 pm on 24 April and the final one at 3 pm on 11 June. During the first three sittings, which took place on 24, 29, and 30 April, Reynolds probably worked on the face, pose, and the general laying in of the composition. Two further sessions took place on 12 and 16 May, while the final six sessions took place in rapid succession on Saturday 31 May, Sunday 1 June, and on 2, 5, 10 and 11 June.



Thursday, June 18, 2026

Rubens. The Restoration of Venus and Cupid


The Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza is presenting a special exhibition in Room 19 of the permanent collection devoted to the restoration and technical study undertaken on Venus and Cupid by Peter Paul Rubens. This project has allowed the restorers to gain more detailed knowledge of the materials used by the artist and his working methods, as well as to reinstate the painting’s chromatic balance and sense of perspective, which were previously concealed under layers of aged and deteriorated varnish.





Peter Paul Rubens
Venus and Cupid, ca. 1606 - 1611
Painting before restoration. Oil on canvas. 137 x 111 cm. Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid

 



Painting after restoration. Oil on canvas. 137 x 111 cm. Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid


The project, which lasted a year and a half, included the technical studies and laboratory analyses required in order to proceed to a rigorous restoration of the work, removing the oxidised varnish and consolidating the paint layer in specific areas with the aim of giving the painting greater overall stability that will ensure its optimum conservation in the future.

 

This special display shows the different phases of the restoration process through interactive digital resources that provide comparative images and enlarged details of the painting, as well as explanatory texts on the results of the technical study of the materials and on the artist’s creative process and painting technique, in addition to an audiovisual projection.

 

The restoration process

Although the paint layer was in good condition, the work showed losses in small areas, which had been filled in and retouched during a previous restoration, as well as some craquelure with slight lifting of paint. In addition, the aged varnish had acquired a very yellowish tone that affected the colours of the entire work, particularly noticeable in the lighter areas. Through their intervention on the painting, the restorers succeeded in fixing and stabilising the craquelure and also recovered the original colours used by the artist.

 

Infrared reflectogram

The infrared image reveals clean and firm underdrawing, particularly in the figures and the lower right area, which Rubens subsequently painted with greater detail and precision. The painting is in fact a copy of a work by Titian, which explains why the artist established a very clear design from the outset and did not make significant changes to the drawing.

 

X-radiograph

The radiographic study reveals a good state of preservation. Only some tears are visible in the central area of the painting, which may have led to relining in the past. The original canvas is a single piece of fabric which was reduced on all sides, presumably to trim them clean. The x-radiograph also reveals a very refined pictorial technique, showing how Rubens applied thick layers of paint with heavy impasto to the figures, while the background appears almost unfinished.

 

The x-radiograph also shows a primer over the preparation layer, based on lead white, which was only applied in the areas corresponding to the figures of Venus and Cupid, probably to add luminosity and volume to the flesh tones in contrast to the dark background.

 

By studying these images, the restorers discovered small changes to the composition, such as Venus's gaze in the mirror's reflection, which the artist initially directed towards the viewer and finally painted looking to her left, and Cupid's feet, which differ slightly in their position in the underdrawing and in the final version.

 

Materials análisis

Laboratory analysis has identified the material composition of the first layer applied to the canvas as calcium carbonate. A grey primer of white lead, calcium carbonate and charcoal was applied over this, followed by the various layers of oil pigment. The final coat has been identified as a resin called rosin and beeswax, typical of a varnish with a matte finish.

 

The frame

The frame is French, in the Régence style, and dates from a later period than the painting. Made of carved wood with water gilding, it combines gloss and matte areas. The restoration of the frame included cleaning the surface dirt with solvents in varying proportions to remove accumulations of the bitumen of Judea coating without damaging the wax patina. The process also involved repairing some deep cracks and missing fragments with a vinyl adhesive in the first phase, followed by an animal glue in the second. The losses were filled in with handmade gesso, and some areas were reconstructed with a wood resin. Reversible techniques based on watercolour and tempera were employed to reintegrate the paint and the final result was protected with a layer of acrylic resin.