ATTRIBUTED TO THOMAS GIBSON (LONDON C. 1680-1751)
ATTRIBUTED TO THOMAS GIBSON (LONDON C. 1680-1751)
ATTRIBUTED TO THOMAS GIBSON (LONDON C. 1680-1751)
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ATTRIBUTED TO THOMAS GIBSON (LONDON C. 1680-1751)

Portrait of Admiral Edward Russell, 1st Earl of Orford (1652-1727), full-length, in peerage robes, with drapery and architecture beyond

Details
ATTRIBUTED TO THOMAS GIBSON (LONDON C. 1680-1751)
Portrait of Admiral Edward Russell, 1st Earl of Orford (1652-1727), full-length, in peerage robes, with drapery and architecture beyond
oil on canvas
86 ¾ x 53 ¾ in. (220.4 x 136.4 cm.)
with identifying inscription 'The Rt Honble Edward Russell / Earl of Orford' (lower right)
in a frame of foliate carved and pierced giltwood, applied to an ebonised subframe

Please note that 100% of the hammer proceeds from this auction will be paid to the Sandys Trust, registered charity number: 1168357, with the exception of limited deductions towards sale costs across the auction which cannot be accurately calculated at this time, capped at a total of £10,000.
Provenance
By descent to the sitter's great-niece, Letitia Tipping (1699-1779), wife of Samuel Sandys, 1st Baron Sandys (1695-1770), and by descent to their son,
Edwin Sandys, 2nd Baron Sandys (1726-1797), and by inheritance to his niece,
Mary, Marchioness of Downshire and 1st Baroness Sandys (1764-1836), and by descent to her second son,
Lieutenant-General Arthur Hill, 2nd Baron Sandys (1792-1860), and by inheritance to his younger brother,
Arthur Marcus Sandys, 3rd Baron Sandys (1798-1863), and thence by descent in the family to,
Richard Hill, 7th Baron Sandys (1931-2013), at Ombersley Court, Worcestershire.
Literature
Ombersley Court Inventory, c.1750-1775, Ombersley MS., where listed in the Salon Room.
J. Grego, Inventory of Pictures: Portraits, Paintings, etc., Ombersley MS., 1905, as ‘Kneller?’, where listed in the Grand Saloon.
ONM / 1 / 2 / 7, journal entry for a visit to Ombersley Court, 25 August 1950 and 26 May 1996, Oliver Millar Archive, Paul Mellon Centre, London, pp. 26 and 27, as 'conceivably by Murray', and 'could be worked up from a Gibson head'.
A. Oswald, 'Ombersley Court, Worcestershire - I', Country Life, 2 January 1953, p. 37.
Ombersley Court Inventory, June 1963, annotated Ombersley MS., as 'School of Kneller', where listed in the Staircase Hall.
Ombersley Court Catalogue of Pictures, undated, Ombersley MS., p. 22, as 'Sir Godfrey Kneller / Gibson', where listed in the Saloon.

Brought to you by

Adrian Hume-Sayer
Adrian Hume-Sayer Director, Specialist

Lot Essay

A grandson of the 4th Earl of Bedford, Admiral Edward Russell was a distinguished Royal Navy officer and politician. Following a brief education at St John’s College, Cambridge, he entered the Navy in 1666, aged thirteen, and saw action at the Battle of Solebay in 1672. Most notably, Russell was one of the ‘Immortal Seven’, the group of English noblemen and senior military commanders who in 1688 issued the Invitation to William, a letter to stadtholder William III, Prince of Orange, promising allegiance and military support in his attempt to depose King James II. Russell was well-rewarded for his role in the Glorious Revolution; the following year he joined the Privy Council and assumed the lucrative role of Treasurer of the Navy.

Russell’s decorated career reached its apex in 1690 when he was appointed Admiral of the Fleet, and then Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, in which capacity he led the Anglo-Dutch fleet that destroyed the French fleet at the battles of Barfleur and La Hogue in 1692. He later commissioned Willem van de Velde the Younger to immortalise these naval memories in paint (see lots 51-54). In England, Russell would go on to serve as MP in three seats, for Launceston, Portsmouth, and Cambridgeshire, and in 1697 was created Baron Shingay, Viscount Barfleur and Earl of Orford. He had acquired Chippenham Park in Cambridgeshire from a distant relative in 1688, which he remodelled and expanded at great expense. In 1691 he married his cousin, Lady Margaret Russell, youngest daughter of the 5th Earl of Bedford. He died, without issue, at Covent Garden in 1727 and was buried in the Russell family vault at St Michael’s Church in Chenies, Buckinghamshire.

The head in the present work appears closest to a three-quarter-length painting given to Thomas Gibson, in the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich (inv. no. BHC2991).

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