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Sir Leslie Stephen

2 of 13 portraits of Sir Leslie Stephen

© National Portrait Gallery, London

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Sir Leslie Stephen

by William Rothenstein
chalk, 1903
7 in. x 5 in. (178 mm x 127 mm)
Purchased, 1925
Primary Collection
NPG 2098

Sitterback to top

  • Sir Leslie Stephen (1832-1904), Writer, philosopher, mountaineer and first editor of the Dictionary of National Biography; Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery. Sitter in 13 portraits.

Artistback to top

  • Sir William Rothenstein (1872-1945), Artist and teacher of art. Artist or producer associated with 222 portraits, Sitter in 24 portraits.

This portraitback to top

Rothenstein recalled drawing Stephen, at his home in 22 Hyde Park Gate, with reverence: 'I felt awed in his presence…I was engaged on an almost sacred task'. Leslie Stephen's daughters both wrote about the sketch. Virginia Woolf felt it made her father seem 'more worn and sad than I remembered' but Vanessa Bell commended it as being 'more like my father than anything else that has been done of him'.

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Events of 1903back to top

Current affairs

Emmeline Pankhurst forms the militant organisation, the Women's Social and Political Union, campaigning for greater rights for women and to secure them the vote. Its members were known as 'suffragettes', and adopted the slogan of 'Deeds, not words'.
Joseph Chamberlain resigns as Colonial Secretary to campaign for tariff reform and an end to free trade, a key economic issue which splits the Conservative party.

Art and science

Henry James publishes The Ambassadors. Autobiographical in tone, it movingly and humorously traces the conversion of the American Lewis Lambert Strether, sent to Paris to find his widowed fiancee Mrs Newsome's wayward son Chad, to European culture.
Charles Rennie Mackintosh, the leading Scottish arts and crafts designer and architect, designs the Willow tea rooms in Glasgow for his patron, Miss Catherine Cranston.

International

The Bolsheviks (meaning 'the majority'), a faction of the exiled Marxist Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, are formed after splitting from the Mensheviks at the Second Party Congress in London.
After gaining independence following the end of the Spanish-American war, Cuba is forced to accept a permanent US military presence at Guantánamo Bay.

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