Nathaniel Dance, R.A. (1735-1811)
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… 显示更多
Nathaniel Dance, R.A. (1735-1811)

Portrait of William Baker, M.P. (1743-1824), of Bayfordbury Manor, Hertford, three-quarter-length, in a brown suit, his right hand holding a volume of Milton, by a column in a landscape

细节
Nathaniel Dance, R.A. (1735-1811)
Portrait of William Baker, M.P. (1743-1824), of Bayfordbury Manor, Hertford, three-quarter-length, in a brown suit, his right hand holding a volume of Milton, by a column in a landscape
oil on canvas
50 x 40 in. (127 x 101.6 cm.)
来源
Presumably commissioned by the sitter, and by descent to Lieut. William Lewis Clinton-Baker, R.N.; Christie's, London, 1 June, 1945, lot 83 (removed from Bayfordbury Manor, Hertford).
展览
Manchester, Art Treasures Exhibition, 1857.
London, South Kensington, The National Portrait Exhibition, 1867.
刻印
M. Bovi.
注意事项
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis. This lot is subject to storage and collection charges. **For Furniture and Decorative Objects, storage charges commence 7 days from sale. Please contact department for further details.**

拍品专文

The sitter was a founding member of the Whig Club. He was Member of Parliament for Plympton Erle (1768-1774), Aldborough (1777-1780), Hertford (1780-1784), and finally Hertfordshire intermittently from 1790 to 1807. In 1804 he inherited the series of portraits by Kneller of the members of the famous Kit-Kat Club, which included Addison, Congreve, Steele and Vanbrugh. Baker's maternal grandfather Jacob Tonson, had been secretary to the club, and had originally commissioned the works to be in a room at Barn Elms where the club gathered, but it had proved too small for the standard full-portrait size, and so they were painted to be 36 x 28 inches, engendering the fashion for pictures of 'Kit-Kat' dimensions. On inheriting the set, by 1812, William Baker built a special room to house them at his house, Bayfordbury Manor, Hertfordshire, where they remained until bought for the National Portrait Gallery, London, in 1945.