GEORGE ENGLEHEART

(1750-1829)

Portrait miniature of a Young Lady, wearing a white dress with blue ribbon and frilled neckline, a white kerchief in her powdered hair

circa 1775
Watercolour on ivory (licence GZHZ97KP)
Oval, 76 mm (3 in) high
Later gilded metal frame

£1,850

'Showing quite clearly the influence of his master, Reynolds, this tiny masterpiece is comparable in quality and composition to Reynolds oil portraits.'
This portrait of a young woman was painted in the first phase of Engleheart’s long career. Enrolled in the Royal Academy schools in 1769, he began his career with natural promise as an artist, and soon transferred to serve an apprenticeship alongside Sir Joshua Reynolds. Painted as early as 1775 (the earliest date in his fee book) this portrait miniature has quite remarkable impact for its size. The sharp folds of the sitter’s lace gown each cast a shadow and the face is painted with remarkable delicacy and precision. Showing quite clearly the influence of his master, Reynolds, this tiny masterpiece is comparable in quality and composition to Reynolds oil portraits.

From 1773, Engleheart gained much patronage from his exhibits at the Royal Academy. His career advanced with great rapidity and his popularity as an artist continued throughout his life, his success eventually recognized by his appointment as miniature painter to the king (1789). A sociable, but not ostentatious character (unlike his main rival, Richard Cosway), his closest circle included artists and poets, including William Hayley, George Romney, William Blake, John Flaxman, and Jeremiah Meyer. One of Engleheart's miniatures of his friend William Hayley (1809) is now in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge. In 1827 Engleheart moved to Blackheath, Kent, to live with his son Nathaniel, and he died there on 21 March 1829; he was buried in the family vault at Kew church where his gravestone can still be found.
Private Collection UK, since 2012

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