£5,000 - £8,000
WITHDRAWN
SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS, PRA, PLYMPTON, DEVON, 1723 - 1792, LONDON, UNTRACED OVAL OIL ON CANVAS
Half length portrait of Luke Gardiner, 1st Viscount Mountjoy, 1745 - 1798, in a beige fur trimmed coat, white stock and striped red waistcoat, reduced in size, re-lined.
(59cm x 70.5cm)
N.B. Reynolds painted two versions of this portrait, in a letter, believed to be dated from July, 1773, he told Luke Gardiner 'I shall send away your picture (the best of the two) immediately; the other I know is to remain here. I have forgot what place it is to be sent.'
Another version sold See Christie's London, Lot 44, 7th December 2010
D. Mannings, Sir Joshua Reynolds, A Complete Catalogue of His Paintings, New Haven and London, 2000, P. 208, under no. 697
Luke Gardiner, 1st Viscount Mountjoy, 1745 - 1798, was the scion of a family that became extremely wealthy as a result of clever land acquisitions and urban development on the north side of Dublin. Educated at Eton and Cambridge, he went on the Grand Tour with his brother William, travelling to France and Italy, 1770/1771). Gardiner was elected to The Society of Dilettanti, 1773 and sat to Sir Joshua Reynolds., February and March that year. In the same year he married Elizabeth Montgomery, daughter of Sir William Montgomery, 1st Bt., and commissioned from Reynolds the celebrated portrait of his wife and her two sisters, The Montgomery Sisters, one of Reynolds' largest and most elaborate attempts at what the Artist referred to as the 'Grand Style' which was to remain in the possession of Mountjoy until it was bequeathed to The London National Gallery, 1837 (London, Tate Britain). Alongside his interest in the arts, Gardiner pursued a political career as Member of Parliament for Co. Dublin (to which he was elected in 1773). A moderate on constitutional issues and a firm believer in public order, he was also a man of strong principles and in 1778 introduced legislation aimed at alleviating many of the economic difficulties faced by Catholics, he also promoted the interest of Dublin and its surrounding areas. Like his father and grandfather he also developed the Gardiner Estate and in the 1770’s was responsible for the development of Temple, Eccles and North Great George's Streets, and later in the 1790’s for Mountjoy Square and Rutland Square. In 1782 he was raised to the peerage as Baron Mountjoy, and six years later was created Viscount Mountjoy, reflecting the family's influence and years of political service. With his first wife, who was to die in childbirth, he had his only surviving son Charles, later Earl of Blessington, 1782 - 1849, he later married Margaret Wallis
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