Bowes Museum
14 May - 25 September 2016
The catalyst for The English Rose – Feminine Beauty from Van Dyck to Sargent -
a salute to 400 years of society beauties - is a portrait recently
acquired by the Museum via Arts Council England, in lieu of inheritance
tax from the estate of the Duke of Northumberland.
Olivia, Mrs Endymion Porter, by
court painter Van Dyck, was painted c1637, when the artist was at the
height of his career. One of his finest female portraits, it depicts Mrs
Porter, a lady-in-waiting to Queen Henrietta Maria (whose portrait also
features in the show) in shift and pearls, displaying the ‘careless
romance’ that is evident in many of Van Dyck’s images.
Whilst this is an intimate domestic
portrait commissioned by her husband, it also demonstrates his wealth,
status and prestige by the fact that he could afford to engage the
King’s painter.
The exhibition’s themes centre on the
artists represented, their sitters and fashions, and will follow a
chronological order from the 17th to the 20th
Century. Alongside The Bowes Museum’s two Van Dyck’s will feature
paintings by Gainsborough, Reynolds, George Romney, John Singer Sargent
and Peter Lely, loaned from galleries around the UK including the
National Gallery; the V&A Museum, London; Dulwich Picture Gallery;
The Holburne Museum, Bath, and the National Galleries of Scotland.
Many of the sitters are as famous as those
engaged to paint them. Mrs Sarah Siddons, the outstanding ‘tragic’
actress of her time, most famous for her dramatic portrayal of Lady
MacBeth, reportedly had Gainsborough experiencing difficulties with her
nose, leading him to exclaim ‘Confound the nose, there’s no end to it’.
"The Linley Sisters", by Thomas Gainsborough (Dulwich Picture Gallery) - Elizabeth (left, standing, aged 18) with her sister Mary.
Fascinating beauties Elizabeth and Mary Linley, part of the famous 18th
Century musical family known as ‘The Nest of the Nightingales’, also
sat for Gainsborough, in the only known painting depicting both sisters
together. The former had a colourful life; betrothed to a man of her
father’s choice, a duel was fought between him and a then penniless
Richard Brinsley Sheridan, soon to become a leading playwright, with
Sheridan eventually winning her hand.
Although the sisters’ extraordinary talents
saw them perform privately for royalty and publicly at Covent Garden,
both were forbidden to sing in public after marriage.
While female artists were thin on the ground in the 17th
Century,
Mary Beale is represented in a self portrait, c1675; not unusual in those days, as there were few models to sit for them. Holding an artist’s palette, it depicts a woman determined to challenge society’s intended role for her.
Mary Beale is represented in a self portrait, c1675; not unusual in those days, as there were few models to sit for them. Holding an artist’s palette, it depicts a woman determined to challenge society’s intended role for her.
Adrian Jenkins, Director of The Bowes
Museum, said: “We are delighted to celebrate the gift of this wonderful
Van Dyck portrait, which will be central to our forthcoming exhibition.
“We also thank the Arts Council for their
decision to retain this important painting in the North of England,
where it will enhance The Bowes Museum’s permanent collection.”