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PAST EXHIBITIONS ARCHIVE
Drawn from Nature and as Large as Life: Thomas Frye's Fancy Heads
9 December 2006 - 1 July 2007
Room 16

Thomas Frye
by Thomas Frye, published 1760
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In the last years of his life
Thomas Frye (1710 - 1762), the Dublin-born artist, published
two remarkable series of mezzotints - 'Fancy Heads' - highly
original life-size images of men and women, notable for their
striking poses, enigmatic expressions, fashionable and exotic
costume. The countless plays performed every week in London,
and the masquerades held in pleasure gardens were probably Frye's
inspiration, and it is likely that he was aware of the growing
'cult of sensibility', fuelled by popular novels of the day.
Frye was a real entrepreneur.
He advertised his print scheme widely in the London daily press,
where the prints were marketed as elegant decoration for a room.
They are very high quality, were expensive and sold as a limited
edition. He hoped they would appeal to the top-end of the market
for 'Fancy' prints, which often showed unknown women in attractive
poses. The mezzotint sets are a lasting testament to his talents
as a printmaker.
The display will touch upon Frye's
fascinating career. As a young man establishing himself as a
portrait painter in London in the 1730s he invented and patented
a recipe for making porcelain - the first time it had been produced
in England - and founded the Bow Porcelain Factory. He managed
the factory for fifteen years before the toxic fumes caused illness
and forced him to retire.
Thomas Frye did not give titles
to any of the prints in this display, and the viewer can only
guess who they represent. Some of the figures seem to be frozen
in a narrative scene - but what is the story? In association
with the London Libraries Development Agency, the National Portrait
Gallery held a creative writing workshop to record the responses
of the modern viewers to these prints. Participants drawn from
the London boroughs of Kensington and Chelsea and Barking and
Dagenham created their own fictional narratives for some of Frye's
characters. Their responses are displayed next to the works that
inspired them. There will also be a board where visitors can
record their own creative responses to the works during their
visit.
Creative
Writing Workshop Captions
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