
Anne Dashwood (1743–1830), Later Countess of Galloway
Joshua Reynolds·1764
Historical Context
Reynolds's Anne Dashwood (1743–1830), later Countess of Galloway, depicts a young woman of aristocratic connection in the idealized manner that was his standard treatment of female sitters from the upper classes. Reynolds transformed his female portrait subjects into images that combined the social identity of the specific individual with a visual elevation that placed them within the tradition of ideal female beauty derived from Italian Renaissance painting. His practice of studying Raphael, Titian, and other Italian masters and adapting their compositional and coloristic approaches to English portrait subjects was both his greatest contribution to English art and the target of his most persistent critics.
Technical Analysis
The portrait shows Reynolds's mature Grand Manner at its most elegant. The figure is posed with classical grace, and the warm palette creates luminous flesh tones against a rich, dark background.
Look Closer
- ◆Reynolds gives this young aristocratic woman a classical poise — the pose elevated without being theatrical or artificially stiff.
- ◆The warm, Venetian-influenced flesh tones distinguish his post-Italian portrait style from his more cautious pre-Italian manner.
- ◆The dark background throws the figure forward and concentrates all available light on the face and expression.
- ◆The portrait is idealized yet retains enough individual character that contemporaries would have recognized her immediately.
See It In Person
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