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1 of 253523 objects
George III dated 1803
Pencil and grey wash | 32.0 x 23.0 cm (sheet of paper) | RCIN 913864
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A pencil portrait of a male figure, standing full-length with his right hand holding a hat and resting on his cane. His left hand on his sword hilt. The sitter - King George III - wears Windsor uniform with the star, ribbon and garter of the Order of the Garter. In the background, the Round and Edward II Towers at Windsor Castle.
This portrait belongs to a large group of drawings in the Royal Collection by Henry Edridge, the prime versions of which were commissioned by George III. Several versions of the same portrait, with small variations, were made by Edridge, doubtless as a result of further royal commissions.
As a young man Edridge was apprenticed to the portrait engraver William Pether. He later attended the Royal Academy Schools, and from 1786 he exhibited as a miniaturist at the Royal Academy. It is for small full-length portrait drawings that he is best known. These are as evocative of their period as are those by Ingres of sitters in early nineteenth-century France or Rome.
In his diary the landscape painter and Royal Academician Joseph Farington records the two periods of sitting which George III, Queen Charlotte and their children granted Edridge, the first in summer 1802 and the second early in the following year. Farington records that on 20 June 1802 Edridge was at Windsor making drawings of the Princesses, ‘but is obliged to wait their time & has them not to sit more than an hour in a day’. Of the later sitting, Farington noted on 25 January 1803: ‘Edridge has been at Windsor 7 weeks making drawings of the Royal family. - The King sat to him on the 3 last days before His Majesty left Windsor. He had wished to sit no more, but consented on the Sunday sat on the Monday, Tuesday, & Wednesday & went to London on Thursday. - Edridge said a very strong impression of the goodness of his Majesty’s disposition was made on his mind by what he saw of him.’
The King is depicted standing against the fortifications of Windsor Castle. He wears Windsor Uniform, a form of dress which he introduced in 1779, comprising a tail coat of dark blue cloth with scarlet collar and cuffs; he also wears insignia of the Order of the Garter.
In the Royal Residences (published in 1819) Pyne describes a group of these ‘whole-length portraits in small’ hanging in the Yellow Bed-Room at Frogmore: ‘Upon the walls of this chamber are several drawings in that tasteful and light manner of uniting the brilliancy of coloured flesh with the freedom of the black-lead pencil, which distinguished the work of Edridge before he adapted his present rich and more elaborate manner’.
Signed and dated H. Edridge, Jan.y 1803
Catalogue entry adapted from George III & Queen Charlotte: Patronage, Collecting and Court Taste, London, 2004Provenance
Commissioned by George III; possibly the 'Portrait of his late Majesty a drawing by Edridge' purchased by King George IV from Colnaghi on 5 September 1821 for £16 16s (Royal Archives Invoice 28338).
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Medium and techniques
Pencil and grey wash
Measurements
32.0 x 23.0 cm (sheet of paper)
Category
Object type(s)
Other number(s)
RL 13864