Alfred, Count D'Orsay

Alfred, Count D'Orsay, by Sir Edwin Landseer, circa 1835 -NPG 4922 - © National Portrait Gallery, London

© National Portrait Gallery, London

Regency Portraits Catalogue

Alfred, Count D'Orsay

by Sir Edwin Landseer
circa 1835
8 7/8 in. x 7 in. (225 mm x 178 mm)
NPG 4922

Inscriptionback to top

Inscribed on the original mount: Count d'Orsay by Himself.

This portraitback to top

Despite the inscription this virile drawing, catalogued as a D'Orsay self-portrait in Christie's sale 11 July 1972 (23), bears little resemblance to D'Orsay's usual rather anaemic style but has every appearance of being by the hand of Landseer. D'Orsay and his iconography are treated in Richard Ormond, National Portrait Gallery: Early Victorian Portraits, 1973, p 147-9.

The 9 satirical drawings [NPG 4914-22] came from an album of 93 drawings, mostly by Landseer, others by Wilkie and D'Orsay, consisting of caricatures, figure and animal studies. The majority are in pen and brown ink, some with brown wash, a few with additions in red chalk, watercolour or sealing wax. The collection was probably formed by Charles Bennet, 6th Earl of Tankerville who as Lord Ossulston was MP for North Northumberland 1832-59 and very much a man about town. Landseer's first meeting with Ossulston is described dramatically in Reminiscences of Life in the Highlands, Landseer being caught red-handed poaching a stag in Glen Feshie forest.
They became firm friends and the 'Hunting of Chevy Chase' (Birmingham Art Gallery) was conceived on a visit to Chillingham in 1825. The first drawing in the album was Landseer and a servant leaving Chillingham Castle 27 September 1835; the earliest dated drawing was 1832, the latest, an illustrated letter from Landseer to Ossulston, 10 October 1852. The album was probably put together at Chillingham Castle by Lady Ida Tankerville, Lord Ossulston's daughter (b. 1857) who married the 13th Earl of Dalhousie in 1877, and was in the family possession until its sale at Christie's in 1972.

Physical descriptionback to top

Whole-length standing in profile to left dressed as an exquisite dandy.

Provenanceback to top

Chillingham Castle (Earl of Tankerville), Lady Ida Tankerville and to her grandson David Patrick Ramsay, Christie's 11 July 1972 (23) bought Agnew and sold to the NPG.


This extended catalogue entry is from the out-of-print National Portrait Gallery collection catalogue: Richard Walker, Regency Portraits, National Portrait Gallery, 1985, and is as published then. For the most up-to-date details on individual Collection works, we recommend reading the information provided in the Search the Collection results on this website in parallel with this text.

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