
Hon. Henry George Herbert (1772–1833), 2nd Earl of Carnarvon
William Beechey·1789
Historical Context
Beechey's portrait of Henry George Herbert, 2nd Earl of Carnarvon (1772–1833), depicts a prominent Whig politician and literary patron at the height of his influence. Herbert was a noted book collector, a friend of Edmund Burke, and an active figure in Whig political culture at the turn of the nineteenth century. The portrait by Beechey — firmly established in the English official portrait tradition — served to document Herbert's social position at a moment when he was in his thirties or forties and at the height of his political influence.
Technical Analysis
Beechey's formal but warm approach to male portraiture is adapted here to a well-dressed aristocrat of literary and political distinction. The face receives careful, individualised attention while the dark coat and white linen provide the standard tonal framework.
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