ID 519301
Lot 12 | Joseph Severn (1793-1872)
Valeur estimée
£ 20 000 – 30 000
Portrait of John Keats at Wentworth Place on the day of his composing 'Ode to a Nightingale'
Oil on canvas, 231/2 x 171/2 in. (59.7 x 44.5 cm). Signed and dated 'Severn/1834' (on the bookcase, lower left).
The frame contains a lock of Keats's hair in a small window.
One of the most celebrated images of Keats, painted by the friend in whose arms he died, framed with a lock of his hair. This is a second and subtly altered version ('with some important changes such as the open eye & raised up from the book') of Severn's famous posthumous portrait of his friend, based in part on Keats's death mask, which is now at the National Portrait Gallery (NPG 58). The first version was executed in 1821-23, in the years immediately following Severn's devoted attendance on Keats's agonising final months before his death in Rome on 23 February 1821, a period in which Keats's sufferings were so intense that Severn reported he would sometimes weep on waking to find himself still alive.
A letter by Severn to George Scharf on 22 December [?1859] describes the genesis of both versions: 'after the death of Keats the impression was so painfull on my mind that I made an effort to call up the most pleasant remembrance in this picture which is posthumous. This was the time he first fell ill & had written the Ode to the Nightingale (1819) on the mor[ning] of my visit to Hampstead I found him sitting with the two chairs as I have painted him & was struck with the first real symptoms of sadness in Keats so finely expressed in that Poem. (The room, the open window, the carpet and chairs are all exact portraits, even to the mezzotint portrait of Shakespeare given him by his old landlady in the Isle of Wight. After this time he lost his cheerfulness & I never saw him like himself again –). I had a draw[in]g of the room, chairs &c done by Mr Charles Brown who was still living in the same house. / During life I had done two portraits of Keats (both engraved) but not entire figures. / This little picture was sold to Mr Travers on the condition that I should be permitted to use it in doing another picture with some important changes such as the open eye & raised up from the book ...'.
According to the NPG, it was this second version, with 'the open eye' that Severn chose to exhibit. Severn remained in Rome for the two decades after Keats's death, and at the time of the execution of the present version he was a successful artist, much in demand with British visitors, and was a moving force in the creation of the British Academy of the Fine Arts in Rome. His fortunes declined in the 1840s and 1850s, before he returned to Rome as British consul in 1861; he is buried beside Keats in the Protestant Cemetery.
The provenance of this portrait is through John Hunter of Craigcrook (1801-1869), a relative of the influential critic Francis, Lord Jeffrey, the editor of the Edinburgh Review. Its origins are recorded by a descendant of Hunter's: '... a picture of Keats, now in the possession of the writer of this article, which was presented to John Hunter by Keats' relatives after his death. It is an oil painting, a copy of the Severn portrait, and contains a lock of the poet's hair in the frame. It was given to Hunter in gratitude for persuading Francis Jeffrey to write a kinder review of Keats' last poem than any other critics had done. The Edinburgh Review reached Keats as he lay dying in Rome and did much to cheer his last days' (Helen Watt, John Hunter: Forgotten Tenant of Craigcrook, 1979). The portrait is noted somewhat critically by Keats's friend Charles Cowden Clarke, ‘the last [portrait by Severn], which is now in the possession of Mr. John Hunter, of Craig Crook, Edinburgh, may be an equally felicitous rendering of one look and manner; but I do not intimately recognize it' (Charles and Mary Cowden Clarke,Recollections of Writers, 1878). Hunter had an extensive literary circle, and the visitors to Craigcrook included Charles Dickens, who would no doubt have seen the portrait.
Artiste: | Joseph Severn (1793 - 1872) |
---|---|
Technique appliquée: | Huile |
Genre: | Portrait |
Artiste: | Joseph Severn (1793 - 1872) |
---|---|
Technique appliquée: | Huile |
Genre: | Portrait |
Adresse de l'enchère |
CHRISTIE'S 8 King Street, St. James's SW1Y 6QT London Royaume-Uni | |
---|---|---|
Aperçu |
| |
Téléphone | +44 (0)20 7839 9060 | |
Commission | see on Website | |
Conditions d'utilisation | Conditions d'utilisation |
Plus du Créateur
Termes connexes
Questions fréquemment posées
Pour participer aux ventes aux enchères, vous devez d’abord, vous inscrire. Après la confirmation de l’adresse e-mail, complétez votre profil d’utilisateur en fournissant des renseignements personnels tels que votre prénom, nom de famille et l’adresse postale. Choisissez un lot qui vous intéresse et indiquez le montant maximum que vous voulez offir pour ce lot. Dès que vous confirmez votre choix, nous transférerons votre demande par voie électronique à la maison de ventes aux enchères appropriée. Si votre demande est acceptée, votre offre va participer aux ventes aux enchères. Vous pouvez vérifier le statut actuel de votre offre en tout temps dans votre cabinet personnel VIL sous l’onglet «Vos offres».
Les enchères sont réalisées par les maisons de ventes et chacune des maisons de ventes décrit ses conditions de vente. Vous pouvez voir les textes dans la rubrique «Information sur les ventes».
Les résultats des ventes aux enchères sont publiés dans quelques jours après la clôture de l’enchère. En haut de la page du site web VIL, vous trouverez l’onglet «Enchères». Cliquez sur cet onglet et naviguez vers la page des catalogues de ventes aux enchères où vous trouverez facilement l’onglet « Résultats des ventes ». Sur cet onglet, sélectionnez l’enchère qui vous intéresse et consultez l’état de vente du lot de votre choix.
Les informations sur les gagnants des enchères sont confidentielles. Le gagnant de l'enchère recevra une notification directe de la maison d'enchères responsable avec des instructions pour les mesures à prendre: une facture de paiement et la manière dont les marchandises ont été reçues.
Chacune de maisons de ventes aux enchères adhère à sa propre politique concernant les modes de paiement des lots remportés. Toutes les maisons de ventes aux enchères acceptent les virements bancaires; la plupart d’elles acceptent les paiements par carte de crédit. Dans un avenir très proche, vous trouverez des renseignements détaillés sous la rubrique «Information sur les ventes», à la page du catalogue et du lot.
Le mode de livraison du lot dépend de sa taille et ses dimensions. Les petits articles peuvent être livrés par la poste. Les objets plus grands sont expédiés par courrier. Les préposés à la livraison des maisons de ventes aux enchères vous proposeront différentes options selon votre cas.
Non. Les archives servent de référence pour l'étude des prix des enchères, des photographies et des descriptions d'œuvres d'art.