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George Romney 1734-1802
Alex Kidson
'Beautifully written ... wonderfully
informative'
Daily Telegraph
The year 2002 marks the bicentenary
of the death of George Romney, one of the key figures in British
art in the late eighteenth century. A chief rival of Sir Joshua
Reynolds and Thomas Gainsborough - and for much of his career
more fashionable than both - he was known both as a portraitist
and as a draftsman. His countless studies for literary and mythological
pictures, made in private moments but which he never had time
to paint, are executed in a bold, spontaneous style that mark
him as one of the first Romantics.
One hundred years ago Romney's
reputation was at its peak. Collectors fought to obtain his portraits
of fresh-faced English women, above all his portraits of Emma
Hart, later Lady Hamilton, who in her youth was Romney's favourite
model and with whom he was widely supposed to have had an affair.
As the more snobbish and sexist aspects of Edwardian taste became
outdated, Romney's art fell spectacularly from favour. His career
remains little understood and many of his best-known works are
among his least distinguished. He both drew and painted with
magnificent freedom and with a dramatic expressiveness unmatched
in British portraiture of his day. Even late in life, as overwork
and disenchantment sapped his enthusiasm, Romney was able to
rekindle his energies for special sitters and when working on
his occasionally sublime literary and historical paintings. This
book will be the first to give a fully rounded overview of his
career.
Alex Kidson is Curator of British
Art at the Walker Art Gallery.
280 x 240mm , 256 pages
216 illustrations, 146 in colour
ISBN 1 85514 334 8
Special online promotion £6 (RRP £25 paperback)
ISBN 1 85514 501 4
Special online promotion £10 (RRP £40 hardback -
exclusive to Walker Art Gallery and NPG)
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