The Revolution in Eighteenth-Century
Art:
Ten British Pictures, 17401840
The ten pictures presented here offer vivid proof of the richness and
versatility of British painting during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries. All are in the Huntington collection, and in discussing them
the author has brought into perspective a fascinating period in European
art. At no previous time, he says, "is there such a radical variety
of forms produced by artists working at the same time under the same circumstances."
The history of art epochs prior to the eighteenth century is largely the
study of a series of clearly defined styles, each of them remarkably consistent
throughout Europe.
In the second half of the eighteenth century, however, there is a fundamental
departure from this orderly procession, and nowhere is this departure
more apparent than in England. We find not one style but many; artists
borrow from ancient Greece or from India and China, from the Byzantine
or from the just-closing rococo period. Nor is it unusual to find these
variations in style within the work of a single artist. Sir Joshua Reynolds,
for instance, uses widely different approaches in two Huntington paintings;
the portrait of Mrs. Siddons, majestically enthroned between her two shadowy
attendants, draws heavily on Classic and Renaissance symbolism, while
that of Lavinia, Countess Spencer, is simply the charmingly intimate portrayal
of a mother and her little boy.
The ten pictures are presented in chronological order, from Hogarth's
Bishop Benjamin Hoadly (about 1739) to Turner's The Grand Canal,
Venice (1837). Some, such as Pinkie and The Blue
Boy, are well known; others, such as Richard Wilson's River Scene
with Bathers, will be less familiar. Two, Blake's Satan, Sin, and
Death and Thomas Rowlandson's Mrs. Siddons Rehearsing, are
drawings. All have been chosen for the light they cast on a period of
profound change, which starts as English painting takes leave of the rococo,
and ends in the beginnings of modern art.

Sir Joshua Reynolds
Mrs. Siddons as the Tragic Muse
Canvas, 93 x 57-1/2 inches

Sir Thomas Lawrence
Pinkie
Canvas, 57-1/2 x 39-1/4 inches

William Blake
Satan, Sin, and Death
Pen and watercolor, 19-1/2 x 15-13/16 inches

John Constable
View on the Stour near Dedham
Canvas, 51 x 74 inches
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