Completed London: Artists and Subjects, Portraits: British 19th C 31 comments Could this be an early portrait by John Everett Millais?
Photo credit: City of Westminster
The painting is mounted together with two other oval paintings the same size dated 1849: ‘Edward Joseph’ and ‘Robert Scace (1801–1866), Chief Surveyor to the Parish of St Marylebone (c.1829–1866)’.
https://bit.ly/37mrkBN
https://bit.ly/3xxwqWd
Compare for instance the portrait of Mrs Coventry Patmore in the Fitzwilliam Museum. https://bit.ly/3fCa4wU
A Thomas Garnett (1766–1802), who was Physician to the Marylebone Dispensary until his death might be this young man's grandfather. The life of the librarian Richard Garnett (1835–1906) [in the British Museum] might be worth looking at, as Millais painted a portrait later of his journalist brother Jeremiah. There is a considerable literature on nineteenth-century members of this Garnett family.
The collection has commented, 'The three portraits are in fact mounted together, see attached. See also four other label attachments. Possibly they share a connection to St Marylebone. I will look in the parish vestry minutes for any clues. We welcome a discussion.'
Completed, Outcome
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30 comments
Some initial thoughts. Were these three portraits cut down from individual portraits or a group portrait? Are the dimensions accurate? They seem too large.
Where did the 1849 date beneath two of the portraits as mounted come from? ‘Board’ is a vague description for the supports.
Photos of the reverses of these three portraits may supply some of the answers to these questions.
As to the artist, not by John Everett Millais. Nor, I think by John Partridge, who crossed my mind.
Likely enough that the portraits are documented in the records inherited by the City of Westminster from the Borough of St Marylebone. But where to start?
All three portraits are evidently by the same hand.
The signature under this portrait appears to be Thomas E. Garnett.
Thomas Garnett the physician and natural philosopher had two daughters, but apparently no sons, so his grandchildren, if any, would most likely not carry the Garnett surname.
John Partridge is very likely, he likes to splash on the red.
Could Etty also be a condenter?
Etty had retired in October 1848 from London to York, where he died in November 1849. This would preclude him from painting a portrait of a London sitter in 1849 (assuming the date given for the present work is correct).
Edward Joseph was a surgeon who lived at 15 Great Marylebone Street, London. Please see footnote 4 on the letter to “Mr. Joseph” from the writer Charles Dickens dated February 17, 1851, which states that he was “Surgeon to St. Marylebone Central Scools”.
“The Pilgrim Edition of the Letters of Charles Dickens: Volume 6: 1850-1852”
By Charles Dickens, Nina Burgis
https://tinyurl.com/3eptd8eb
According to the 1851 Census on Ancestry, Edward Joseph, living at 15 Great Marylebone Street, London, with his wife, children and servants, was 46 years old and born in Montgomeryshire, Wales.
This is the same shape as the Pre-Raphaelite portraits made of each other for Thomas Woolner in 1853, who was emigrating. They were approximately 30 x 22 cms. It doesn't look good enough for Millais, although it is extremely competent. The Millais expert is Malcolm Warner: warner4911@gmail.com.
Frankly, I had no evidence for the 1849 date when I proposed this and wondered if these might be a little eariier and be three of the many missing early works by Millais painted for very little money commissioned by the London based lawyer and defender of Chartists, Sergeant Thomas - and the evident weaknesses being explicable if they were by a very young artist before he started exhibiting
Peter, thank you for the email address. I will email Malcolm now and ask if he would be kind enough to give us his thoughts from the material presented on this thread. David
One possibility for the sitter is Thomas Edwards Garnett. Probate records show that he died on February 21, 1859. He lived at 38 Wigmore Street in the County of Middlesex. He was described as an “oilman” with effects under £4,000. That record shows that he was married to Charlotte Garnett. I have ordered the probate record.
According to the 1841 Census on Ancestry, Thomas and Charlotte lived in the Borough of St. Marylebone, Parish of St. Pancras (Thomas aged 40 and Charlotte aged 25). He was described as a “Coal M**” [Maker?]. She later appeared as a widow in the 1861 Census (age 46), living with a servant in Hammersmith.
Malcolm Warner has commented: 'Those three portraits are very good, and I don’t think Millais would be offended by anyone thinking they might be by him. On the other hand, I’m afraid I don’t. The technique is a bit too smooth for him in 1849, especially in the painting of the complexions. If there were a signature or old label connecting him to the portraits, I might be swayed. But the style isn’t enough by itself—there are just too many artists at that time who could have done them. The red background to the one of Thomas Garnett seems very distinctive—whoever the artist was, I bet that background was a favorite device—but I’m afraid I don’t have any suggestions. You only have to look at the ‘Drawings and Miniatures’ section of the Royal Academy catalogues to see how many long-forgotten artists there were doing small portraits like these. By the way, I gave that a try, looking at that part of the RA catalogue of 1850, but there weren’t portraits of any of these three chaps, alas.'
Since the three portraits are by the same hand, I have been comparing each of them to works by Millais from about 1850. I thought you might be interested in this comparison (attached) of the portrait of Robert Scace https://tinyurl.com/t7hftfnf with “Wilkie Collins” by Millais https://tinyurl.com/4udstbsr. Note the write-up to the Millais painting states how it was painted in 1850 but submitted by an unnamed person to the Trustees of the National Portrait Gallery in 1894. The two works could almost depict the same man, except for the prominent forehead in the portrait of Wilkie Collins. However, in support of Malcolm Warner’s view above, the painting technique is quite markedly different.
In the period from at the latest 1849 and throughout the 1850s, all three men - Thomas Edwards Garnett (1801 - 1859), coal and charcoal dealer; Robert Scace (1800 - 1866), architect & surveyor; and Edward Joseph (1804 - 1857), surgeon - were actively involved with the Marylebone Vestry. Garnett was also involved from the mid-1830s and throughout the 1840s with The Servants' Institution and the St. Marylebone Alms House Institution.
Regarding Robert Scace.....
Robert Scace (1801 - 1866), Chief Surveyor to the Parish of St. Marylebone (c.1829 - 1866)
The first clear newspaper reference to Scace in his role as the St. Marylebone Surveyor appears in the Morning Chronicle of the 1st January 1830.
Scace was born in Noyle, Wiltshire, in 1800/1801 and married in around 1833. In the 1841 UK Census he was listed as living at New Church Street West, Marylebone, aged 40, a surveyor. With him were his wife Emily, aged 30 (therefore born in 1811), and their two daughters, Susan, aged 7, and Mary, aged 2.
Emily Scace died in Marylebone in December 1845, and, from her address at Townsend Road in that parish, was buried, "aged 36", on the 2nd January 1846.
By the 1861 Census, Robert Scace, Surveyor, a widower, aged 60, was living at the modest though elegant 27, Grove Road, St. John's Wood, along with his daughter Mary, aged 18, and an eighteen year old house servant, Mary Wooton.
The Marylebone Mercury, of Saturday 11th August 1866, carried the following death notice:
"Died on the 8th inst., in the 67th year of his age, Robert Scace, late of No. 27, Grove Road, St. John's Wood, for nearly forty years the Chief Surveyor of the parish of St. Marylebone."
The same newspaper, of Saturday 20th October 1866, published the attached advertisement concerning the erection of a monument in Scace's memory, to be located at Finchely cemetery.
If the dating of this portrait is accurate, it shows Scace when he was aged 48.
A couple of small details to add to Kieran’s research:
According to Ancestry, Robert Scace married Emily Huish on August 4, 1828 at All Souls, St Marylebone, London, England.
Although the 1841 UK Census lists Robert as being born in Noyle, I googled Noyle and it was corrected to Knoyle.
Very good to have Kieran's input of 8 August 03:09.
This discussion was launched just two days ago so we cannot expect the collection to have checked the St Marylebone vestry minutes yet, as promised at the outset of the discussion. But when such a check is made, the focus should be on 1849 and perhaps the preceding year to see if the commissioning or unveiling of these portraits is recorded.
Probably the same Thomas Garnett was also actively involved in the Marylebone Literary & Scientific Institution, which concerned itself with art and music as well as the L&S (https://bit.ly/2VHdC9K). Their premises and lecture hall were no more than three or four minutes' walk along what is now all Wigmore Street from his home and business at no. 38, close to the junction with Marylebone Lane. Contemporary directories show him trading as both a grocer and an oil & colourman as well as those previously mentioned. Interestingly oil & colourmen often supplied oil paints to artists as a sideline; however, he does not appear in Jacob's NPG list of British artists’ suppliers ( https://bit.ly/2U3c8Xd ), and it's probably a red herring.
I've not come across evidence that Garnett supplied paint or other materials to artists, which is why he is not in the NPG listing. But I'm open to new information.
The will of Thomas Edwards Garnett, written on January 24, 1859, does not contain any names of artists. The first bequest was to Martha Bristoe, "who formerly lived with us as servant". He also made bequests to his wife Charlotte, his "dear friend" Alfred Bainbridge David Esq. and his "kindest and dearest friend" Frederick Horatio Bridgman Esq. Frederick appears on the 1851 Census living at 10 Wigmore Street - he was a confectioner employing 15 men. Thomas also made financial provisions for Martha's son "Thomas Edward Garnett Briscoe known as Thomas Edward Browne" who “is now at school with Mr. Cooper, Wimberley House, Fulham” and not yet 21. It seems that Thomas Garnett had originally intended to include bequests to various institutions but directed that the list be cut out of his will one week before he died. Witnesses were Emma Wollett and Jane Fenn.
BTW. I was watching Inspector Alleyn on TV last night.On the wall in the corridor of the country house there was a VERY similar painting. I freeze framed,got my handheld device out-called up art detective and compared the two paintings. Both Oval.Both red ochre background.Both faces VERY similar-though the one on TV looking the other way-and differences in clothing below the chin. Unfortunately I cannot discover which real country house it was filmed at.
I think that the way forward lies with the collection. As I put it two months ago, "This discussion was launched just two days ago so we cannot expect the collection to have checked the St Marylebone vestry minutes yet, as promised at the outset of the discussion. But when such a check is made, the focus should be on 1849 and perhaps the preceding year to see if the commissioning or unveiling of these portraits is recorded."
But this was two months ago.
London-based Henry William Pickersgill RA (1782–1875) has a work that is somewhat similar to the portrait of Robert Scace, ‘Emily Maria Pickersgill (1837–1924), Later Mrs George Hebberd Cable, in Spanish Costume’, from c. 1850. While the young girl (his niece) does not have rosy cheeks, her eyes, eyebrows, nose and mouth are quite similar to those of Robert Scace. The red flower in her hat is painted in a similar manner to the red background above the head of Robert Scace. https://tinyurl.com/93c3nh9j. I have attached a composite based on a flipped version of the portrait of Robert Scace.
His son Henry Hall Pickersgill (1812-1861) was also an artist. Here is a link to one of his works from c. 1843-1850 ‘A Circassian Girl’. https://tinyurl.com/3ehmdxvu. Notice the striped yellow-and-black fabric and the bright cherry red in each work. I have attached a composite based on the portrait ‘Thomas Garnett’.
Another suggestion is London-based artist John Prescott Knight (1803-1881). His ‘Portrait of a Lady’, c. 1839 is on Pinterest. https://tinyurl.com/mfcxneck. Like the portrait ‘Edward Joseph’, there is a bright cherry red background on one side of the sitter and a darker red background on the other side. The bow tie in his work ‘John Henry Robinson (1796-1871)’ is quite similar to the bow tie in the portrait ‘Edward Joseph’. https://tinyurl.com/2bbm6btn. I have attached composites.
I continue to suggest that the way forward lies with the collection checking the St Marylebone vestry minutes, as promised at the outset of the discussion. When such a check is made, the focus should be on 1849 and perhaps the preceding year to see if the commissioning or unveiling of these portraits is recorded. Without a response, we should probably close this discussion on the basis that the portraits are not by Millais.
Alternatively, is there an art detective who would see if they can consult the minutes in Westminster Archives?
Jacob, I can only apologise. I have found a reply from the Archivist who replied back in September here - I am very sorry - with two relevant entries. A terrible oversight. I will convert the images and paste them into this discussion. David
Jacob, sorry again - I was thinking about another discussion where a reply came back in September, so please ignore what I said in that last posting. I will separately email the Archivist and see if they can find anything also in relation to this discussion. David
Jacob, our contact is away from work until 15 February. Regards, David
The collection commented at the outset of this discussion, 6 August 2021, 'The three portraits are in fact mounted together, see attached... Possibly they share a connection to St Marylebone. I will look in the parish vestry minutes for any clues. We welcome a discussion.'
Do we still have hopes that the collection will follow this up? Or can an art detective apply to see them?