Sir Thomas Lawrence
(1769-1830)
George IV 1822
oil on canvas, 1061/2 x 701/2 ins
Courtesy of the
Trustees of The Wallace Collection, London
Frame: English, c. 1823 matt oil gilded frame with compo-
sition ornament in the French taste with applied corners.
Original gilding
Maker's label on
reverse, George Morant, Carver, Gilder and Picture Frame
Maker to His Majesty, 88 New Bond Street, London.
Provenance: Harewood
House, Yorkshire
Dimensions: Sight Size 104 1/2 x 68 l/2ins
Section Width 11 1/2 ins
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"The
finest picture shown without an appropriate Frame loses a great
advantage as on the other hand it sustains material injury from
a frame injudiciously selected", wrote Sir Thomas Lawrence
on igth October 1828 in reply to his patron Mrs Gott who had written
suggesting that the frames he had ordered for the portraits of
Mr and Mrs Gott should be much narrower than his usual pattern.
Lawrence assured her, "The pattern has been selected by me
and its dimensions determined solely with a view to the advantage
of the pictures".
This correspondence regarding the framing
of the pair of portraits which he describes as, "Two of the
best that I have ever painted", exemplifies the lengths that
Lawrence often went to in the latter part of his career to ensure
the best appearance of his pictures. He specified that the breadth
of the mouldings for the Gott pictures should be nine inches and
that, "Less than six would I am certain be injurious to the
Pictures." However, he conceded over the width of the moulding
and in his next letter of 26th November he remarks, "I shall
now only pray that the other pictures be brought up close to them,
so that the effect of greater breadth of gilding may still be
retained."
From 1822 the name of George Morant and
Sons appears in the Lawrence accounts for making frames. Their
trade card lists their activities as "House Decorators, Carvers,
Gilders and Picture Frame Makers To His Majesty" and whilst
there is no evidence that Lawrence designed his own frames, the
firm of Morant produced three or four frame patterns of varying
moulding widths of which Lawrence approved and ordered regularly.
He stated that, "A good frame should be sufficiently broad
and rich, but the ornament of the richness composed throughout
of small parts, and usually it should be unburnished."
The ornament, French in taste and derived
from Regence patterns, was cast in composition from carved boxwood
moulds. A contemporary recipe for "compo" is given in
The Decorators Assistant, May 1847) "To make compo ornament
for picture frames &c - boil the seven pounds of the best
glue in seven half-pints of water; melt three pounds of white
resin in three pints of raw linseed oil. When the ingredients
are well boiled, put them into a large vessel and simmer them
for half-an-hour, stirring it, and taking care it does not boil
over.
When this is done, pour the mixture into
a large quantity of whiting (previously rolled and sifted very
fine), and mix it to the consistence of dough, and it is ready
for use." Lawrence preferred his frames to be oil gilded,
desiring the effect of dull matt gold close up to the picture.
It also had the advantage of being more durable and easier to
clean, a convenience remarked on by The Marquis of Ebercorn writing
to Sir Thomas Lawrence on i6th November 1812, "lady Ebercorn
wishes lady Caroline Campbells picture frame to be of oil gold
for the sake of cleaning and preserving, I think she is right
in as much as our friends think it the best for the painting."
Changes in taste and interior decoration, and the relocation of
pictures, meant that many paintings were reframed to suit their
new context. Two of Lawrence's "Bishops" full-length
portraits that were later reframed, interestingly document the
changing taste in framing. These are the portrait of Henry Lascelles,
2nd Earl of Harewood MP, 1825, hanging at Harewood House, Yorkshire,
and of King George IV, 1822, now hanging in the Wallace Collection,
which were given the same pattern of frame described in Morant's
account to "His Most Gracious Majesty" dated i6th February
1824 as, "an extra large richly ornamented frame for a whole
length Portrait of His Majesty seated on a sofa - sent to the
Marchioness Conyngham £46-10-0", a standard price for
such a frame.
It was during the extensive remodelling
of Harewood House in 1845-50 by Sir Charles Barry that the portrait
of Henry Lascelles was reframed in the same pattern as a number
of other pictures in the dining room.
The portrait of George IV was removed from
its frame and installed in panelling in the Front State Room at
Hertford House, Manchester Square, shortly after its purchase
by Sir Richard Wallace in 1885. This positioning would not have
pleased Lawrence who in 1818 expressed his concern to the*Duke
of Wellington who similarly intended to fix his portraits of Lord
Lynedock and Lord Bathhurst in panelling.
"I will order such temporary frames
for the pictures as your Grace has mentioned; but you must forgive
me for expressing my hope that they will hearafter be plac'd in
gilt frame, rather than fix'd in pannels of the room; the latter
being as unfavourable to Pictures as the former, from long experience,
are proved to be advantageous." The portrait of George IV
has needed to be reframed since it was re-hung in the Great gallery
at the Wallace Collection in the narrow inner slip from its original
frame. The opportunity for the picture to be returned to a frame
of the pattern originally chosen by Lawrence, currently on loan
from Wiggins, arose when the discarded frame from the portrait
of Henry Lascelles was sold at auction after having been carefully
stored since 1845 in the carpenters' store at Harewood House.
The reframing of pictures in earlier periods and the survival
of those frames that were no longer thought fashionable or suitable
means that historically appropriate frames can be found for paintings
today.
George Morant (1770-1846)
Founded in 1790 at 88 New Bond Street,
London, the firm was described as a "Paper Hanging Warehouse".
By 1819 their activities were listed as "Ornamental Painter
and Paper Hanging Manufacturer" and by 1825, they had added
carver, gilder and picture frame maker. Morant supplied frames
to George IV for the New Corridor at Windsor Castle; included
on the bill dated 20th November 1823, £25.10s. "A richly
ornamented frame for a Bishops half length portrait of Mr Pitt
for Windsor Castle", whilst in April 1827 George IV was billed
£50 for "A bold, richly ornamented frame" to go
around the portrait of Sir Walter Scott.
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