Painted in 1783, this captivating portrait of a Lady by Thomas Beach (1738–1806) exemplifies the artist’s celebrated ability to blend the ''Grand Manner'' of his mentor, Sir Joshua Reynolds, with a direct and intimate sensitivity.
The sitter is presented in a half-length pose against a dramatic, dark background that pushes her presence into the immediate foreground. Beach masterfully balances the era''s taste for theatricality with a sense of quiet dignity.
Her expression is poised and intelligent, characterized by the ''strong likeness'' for which Beach was famous. Contemporaries often remarked that his portraits were so lifelike they ''always explain themselves.'' Horsce Walpole remarked ''His portraits never require the horrid question of—''Pray who is that, Sir?''—they always explain themselves.''.
The sitter wears a delicate lace-trimmed bodice in a soft cornflower blue, with a fine, translucent lace shawl. The intricate white-work of the shawl, dotted with fine embroi
...dery, showcases Beach’s technical skill in rendering textures. The patterned wrap—likely a silk or fine wool shawl with botanical motifs—is draped over her shoulders, adding a rich, tactile contrast to the ethereal lace.
Painted during the height of Beach’s career in Bath, a hub for the 18th-century fashionable elite, this work reflects the artist''s peak period. Having studied under Reynolds at the St. Martin’s Lane Academy, Beach refined a style that avoided the occasionally stiff formality of his peers, opting instead for a more naturalistic and approachable elegance.
Thomas Beach RA (Milton Abbas, Dorset 1738-1806 Dorchester) was a British portrait artist who studied under Joshua Reynolds. Whilst at school in Abbey Milton (now known as Milton Abbas), Beach''s talent came to the attention of Lord Milton, a governor of the school, who sent him to London in 1760 to be a pupil of Joshua Reynolds and he became a student at the Academy of Painting in St Martin''s Lane.
From London, he moved to Bath where he established a very successful and busy portrait practice, living and working at no.2 Westgate street. From here in 1772, he sent three portraits to the Exhibition of the Incorporated Society of Artists.
By 1785 he was back in London, living in St James'' Square and he exhibited at the Royal Academy in London every year from then until 1790 and again in 1797 with a portrait of the Prince of Wales (later George IV) when he had moved to Strand on the Green near Kew. Some of Beach''s well-known sitters included members of the Helyar family of Coker Court, Dorset (1760''s), members of the Penruddocke family of Compton Park, Wiltshire, Elizabeth, Lady Craven with a harp (1776), Richard Tattersall, horse auctioneer and founder of ''Tattersalls'' (1787), William Woodfall, the dramatic critic and parliamentary reporter (1782, now in the NPG London), and around twelve known portraits of the famous actress Mrs Siddons with whom he remained friends for the rest of his life.
Beach''s last recorded work was a self-portrait painted in 1802 and with his health ailing, he retired to Dorset where he died in 1806 aged 68.
ISHERWOOD FINE ART Antique ID Number (AIDN): SA1203756
Dateline of this antique is 18th Century
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