Sir Henry Raeburn, R.A. (1756-1823)
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Sir Henry Raeburn, R.A. (1756-1823)

Portrait of a gentleman, traditionally identified as Andrew Wauchope of Niddrie (1711-1784), three-quarter-length, in a black coat, his right hand resting on a red draped table with his gloves and top hat, a draped curtain and mountainous wooded landscape beyond

Details
Sir Henry Raeburn, R.A. (1756-1823)
Portrait of a gentleman, traditionally identified as Andrew Wauchope of Niddrie (1711-1784), three-quarter-length, in a black coat, his right hand resting on a red draped table with his gloves and top hat, a draped curtain and mountainous wooded landscape beyond
oil on canvas
60 x 45¼ in. (152.5 x 115.5 cm.)
in the original carved and gilded frame
Provenance
by descent in the sitter's family until 1950; Wauchope Settlement Trust Sale, Christie's, London, 12 May 1950, lot 81 (550 guineas to Beliser).
Sotheby's, London, 28 November 1973, lot 31 (sold for £1,000).
with Thos. Agnew & Sons Ltd., from whom acquired by Sir James Hunter Blair, 7th bt. in 1973.
Literature
W.R. Andrew, Life of Sir Henry Raeburn, R.A., London, 1886, p.157. Sir W. Armstrong, Sir Henry Raeburn, London, 1901, p.113.
E. Pinnington, Sir Henry Raeburn, R.A., London, 1904, p.251.
J. Greig, Sir Henry Raeburn, R.A., London, 1911, pp.xlvii and 62.
F. Russell, 'Confidence and Taste: The Blairquhan Collection', Country Life, 14 August 1986, p.504.
D. Mackie, Complete Catalogue of Raeburn, Life and Art, unpublished PhD thesis, University of Edinburgh, 1994, IV, pp.889-890, no.735, fig.107.
Exhibited
Edinburgh, Royal Scottish Academy, 1863, no.10 (lent by A. Wauchope).
Edinburgh, The Raeburn Exhibition, 1876, no.162 (lent by Captain W. Wauchope).
London, Burlington House, 1908, no.166.
Special notice
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.

Lot Essay

Stylistically, this portrait is likely to date to the last decade and a half of the artist's life. The format of the canvas; the way in which the sitter is presented; and the Romantic, freely executed landscape with its greenish-blue sky, are all characteristic of Raeburn's late style. Raeburn began to produce portraits that were larger than conventional canvas sizes, and presenting his sitters in a more dramatic manner with costly furnishings towards the end of the first decade of the 19th century. These changes may be understood in part as an attempt to increase the value of his works, on account of his bankruptcy of 1808.

The dating of this portrait on stylistic grounds to c.1808-1823 negates the traditional identification of the sitter as Andrew Wauchope of Niddrie. Nevertheless, the sitter is likely to be a member of the Wauchope family. Several members of the family sat to Raeburn, including James Wauchope (1767-1797), John Wauchope of Edmonstone (1742-1810), his wife Mrs Anne Wauchope of Edmonstone (1740-1811) and John Wauchope W.S. (1751-1828) (National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh; Mackie, op.cit, nos. 736, 737, 738 and 739 respectively).

There would appear to be three versions of this portrait type: two three-quarter-lengths and a head and shoulders (29 x 24 1/4 in.). The latter was sold at Christie's on 13 February 1981 (lot 46) when the sitter was wrongly identified as E. E. Livingstone (see Mackie, op.cit, no. 468). The information relating to the two larger versions is presently inextricably interwoven. There are numerous minor differences between the present three-quarter-length and that formerly with the Newhouse Gallery, New York.

Raeburn had been encouraged at the outset of his career by Sir James Hunter Blair, 1st bt. (1741-1787). This portrait entered the Blairquhan collection in 1973.

We are grateful to David Mackie (St. Catharine's College, Cambridge) for his assistance in preparing this catalogue entry.

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