RICHARD COSWAY
Portrait Miniature of a Gentleman of the Stadion Family, with a moustache, wearing blue coat, white waistcoat and cravat
The Limner Company : Portrait Miniature
Date dated 1797
Medium Watercolour on ivory
Here, the sitter’s most distinctive feature is his neat moustache, which would have been unusual for an Englishman to sport at this period. Very few men seem to have grown facial hair at this time – the closest example to this portrait being the later portrait of a man in Classical dress, previously thought to be Charles or John Phillip Kemble. 2
Painted the year after his only daughter Louisa’s death, at the age of seven, Cosway shows his more mature and sombre style in the current portrait. As Stephen Lloyd notes, Cosway also turned more to his ‘eccentric spiritual explorations’ after Louisa died, including Swedenborgianism and Mesmerism, becoming a faith healer and astrologer.3 Understandably, Cosway appears to have taken on fewer commissions in the year following Louisa’s death, but began exhibiting again in 1798, as well as being a member of the Hanging Committee for the Royal Academy.
Maria Cosway was similarly engaged during this time of mourning, particularly in learning the art of engraving. In the year this portrait was painted by her husband, she etched a portrait of Sir Sidney Smith after Phillippe Hennequin.4 The International reach of the Cosway’s was renowned and it should be no surprise to conclude that the current sitter was a member of a distinguished Austrian family.
Date: dated 1797
Medium: Watercolour on ivory
Signature: The reverse signed and dated by the artist; ‘Rdus Cosway R A Primarius Pictor Serenissimi Walliae Principis Pinxit 1797’, with notes by later owners in ink (A.S.; Nachl. Ant. Graf Stadion, Abg. Im Katalog (Legacy count Ant. Stadion))
Provenance: Property of State Minister Count Stadion, auction, Vienna, 1917, lot 223;
Where likely bought by Alfred von Strasser-Sànczi (1854-1937))1, pictured in his 1931 Catalogue (Vienna), curated by Strasser- Sànczi and Professor Emerich Ullmann, page XXXII, b (described as ‘English’ and of an ‘English aristocrat’;
European Private Collection
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