George Chinnery, R.H.A. (1774-1852)
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 1… Read more
George Chinnery, R.H.A. (1774-1852)

Portrait of an officer of the East India Company, small three-quarter-length, in uniform, seated

Details
George Chinnery, R.H.A. (1774-1852)
Portrait of an officer of the East India Company, small three-quarter-length, in uniform, seated
oil on canvas
15¾ x 12¾ in. (40 x 32.5 cm.)
Special notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 15% on the buyer's premium
Sale room notice
Please note that the sitter is likely to be an Officer of Engineers in the Honourable East India Company.

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Lot Essay

George Chinnery met success early as a portraitist, exhibiting his first work in 1791, and winning acclaim in both London and then Dublin, where he moved in 1795. During his time in Dublin, he became R.H.A. The rest of his life seems to have been motivated partly by a desire to avoid his wife, whom he had married in Ireland, and with whom he had a young family. Deserting them in 1802, he sailed to India, and for twenty years painted scenes of Indian life, and portraits of the British expatriate community. In 1825, he discovered that his family had tracked him down, and fled ahead of them to Macao. He continued on to Canton, but heard in 1830 that his wife had died; he then returned to Macao and continued his career as a painter there, showing his all-embracing fascination with Oriental life. He died a prosperous man, in 1852.

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