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Thomas Worlidge. Head of an oriental man. 1753 etching
Thomas Worlidge. Head of an oriental man. 1753 etching
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Head of an old man. Artist and engraver: Thomas Worlidge, (1700 – 1766). Production date: 1753, lifetime impression. Technique: etching. Size: 8.9x10.5 cms. Condition: some writing at the back (HW?) is visible on the front print. Background: Frequently called ´the English Rembrandt´, Thomas Worlidge (1700 – 1766), in his own day, was an artist of considerable status and international renown, yet by the early twentieth century he had been pretty well forgotten. However, a 1983 exhibition ‘Rembrandt in Eighteenth – Century England’ illuminated Worlidge as the subject of scholarly research, providing greater detail of his life and career, which had previously been neglected by other commentators. A more recent re-awakening of interest in Worlidge accompanies the growing popularity of Eighteenth – Century peintre – gravuers in general, and a return to critical favour of the genre. Born in Peterborough, Worlidge was the son of an eminent solicitor at law. At a young age, his mother had him instructed in drawing and apprenticed him to Genoese painter Allessandro Grimaldi, ‘famous for designing chandeliers and etching in gold or glass’. Grimaldi put Worlidge under the care of Louis – Philippe Boitard, ‘a disciple of the great La-Fage’ and with Boitard, Worlidge travelled in Holland and Flanders.; Worlidge’s career spanned the Rembrandt craze of the mid Eighteenth – Century and his enthusiasm for the work of Rembrandt, which was shared by a number of influential artists, was the dominant force in his life and work. At the time, Rembrandt’s prints were being imported into England and sold for huge sums of money, while his English contemporaries established their virtuosity by imitating the works of the Dutch master, and even in the case of William Baillie, by re-working his plates. Worlidge’s principal occupation was as a portrait painter usually in pencil and in miniature. He does not appear to have begun to publish etchings until the early 1750s when a series of newspaper advertisements of portraits of notable personalities such as Garrick (no.42) and the King (no.23) drew attention to his work. In 1754 he had published his own portrait in Rembrandt costume, as a frontispiece to his works, ‘Six new etchings’. His carefully cultivated, and growing reputation as the English Rembrandt was evidently already in place. In December 1757, Worlidge issued proposals for his most ambitious and expensive works, an imitation of Rembrandt’s ‘Hundred Guilder’ print, offered to subscribers for 2 guineas, and to non-subscribers for 3. His prices were generally very high for the period and reflect the esteem in which his work was held by contemporaries, a trait which only grew stronger as his career progressed. The comprehensive collection from our latest listing includes several outstanding and unusual impressions amongst a wide range of examples printed during Worlidge’s lifetime, or soon after his death. They reflect both the importance and popularity of one of England’s least remembered, yet most important artists of the Eighteenth – Century.; Head of an old man. Artist and engraver: Thomas Worlidge, (1700 – 1766). Production date: 1753, lifetime impression. Technique: etching. Size: 8.9x10.5 cms. Condition: some writing at the back (HW?) is visible on the front print. Background: Frequently called ´the English Rembrandt´, Thomas Worlidge (1700 – 1766), in his own day, was an artist of considerable status and international renown, yet by the early twentieth century he had been pretty well forgotten. However, a 1983 exhibition ‘Rembrandt in Eighteenth – Century England’ illuminated Worlidge as the subject of scholarly research, providing greater detail of his life and career, which had previously been neglected by other commentators. A more recent re-awakening of interest in Worlidge accompanies the growing popularity of Eighteenth – Century peintre – gravuers in general, and a return to critical favour of the genre. Born in Peterborough, Worlidge was the son of an eminent solicitor at law. At a young age, his mother had him instructed in drawing and apprenticed him to Genoese painter Allessandro Grimaldi, ‘famous for designing chandeliers and etching in gold or glass’. Grimaldi put Worlidge under the care of Louis – Philippe Boitard, ‘a disciple of the great La-Fage’ and with Boitard, Worlidge travelled in Holland and Flanders.; Worlidge’s career spanned the Rembrandt craze of the mid Eighteenth – Century and his enthusiasm for the work of Rembrandt, which was shared by a number of influential artists, was the dominant force in his life and work. At the time, Rembrandt’s prints were being imported into England and sold for huge sums of money, while his English contemporaries established their virtuosity by imitating the works of the Dutch master, and even in the case of William Baillie, by re-working his plates. Worlidge’s principal occupation was as a portrait painter usually in pencil and in miniature. He does not appear to have begun to publish etchings until the early 1750s when a series of newspaper advertisements of portraits of notable personalities such as Garrick (no.42) and the King (no.23) drew attention to his work. In 1754 he had published his own portrait in Rembrandt costume, as a frontispiece to his works, ‘Six new etchings’. His carefully cultivated, and growing reputation as the English Rembrandt was evidently already in place. In December 1757, Worlidge issued proposals for his most ambitious and expensive works, an imitation of Rembrandt’s ‘Hundred Guilder’ print, offered to subscribers for 2 guineas, and to non-subscribers for 3. His prices were generally very high for the period and reflect the esteem in which his work was held by contemporaries, a trait which only grew stronger as his career progressed. The comprehensive collection from our latest listing includes several outstanding and unusual impressions amongst a wide range of examples printed during Worlidge’s lifetime, or soon after his death. They reflect both the importance and popularity of one of England’s least remembered, yet most important artists of the Eighteenth – Century.

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    Thomas Worlidge. Head of an oriental man. 1753 etching

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