Lot 52
  • 52

Sir James Jebusa Shannon, R.A., R.B.A., R.H.A.

Estimate
250,000 - 350,000 GBP
bidding is closed

Description

  • Sir James Jebusa Shannon, R.A., R.B.A., R.H.A.
  • portraits of Lorna and Dorothy Bell, Daughters of W. Heward Bell, esq.
  • signed l.l.: J. J. SHANNON
  • oil on canvas

Provenance

Sotheby's, New York, 10 November 1998, lot 298a;
Private collection

Exhibited

Royal Academy, 1904, no.281

Literature

Black and White: Royal Academy and New Gallery Pictures and Sculpture for 1904, illustrated p. 12;
Academy Notes, 1904, p. 18;
Art Journal, 1904, p. 187: 'Mr J. J. Shannon's "Daughters of W. Howard (sic) Bell, Esq" is a cunningly [...] painted group, powerful and complete in satisfaction';
Studio, Vol. XXXII, 1904, p. 29: 'Mr J. J. Shanon's... group of Lorna and Dorothy, Daughters of W. Heward Bell, Esq., [is] also memorable'

Condition

UNCONDITIONAL AND WITHOUT PREJUDICE Structural Condition The canvas has been lined and this is ensuring an even and secure support and no further structural work is required. Paint surface The paint surface has a slightly uneven varnish layer and revarnishing would be beneficial. Inspection under ultra-violet light shows small, scattered retouchings, the most significant of which are: 1) a thin vertical line which would appear to cover a seam in the canvas, which is approximately 26 cm in from the left vertical framing edge, 2) a band of retouching in the upper left of the background, just to the right of the canvas seam, 3) an 8 cm long diagonal line just beneath this band of retouching, 4) tiny touches on the forehead of the girl in a white dress and very small retouchings on the girl in a black dress. It should be stressed that all these retouchings are of minimal size. Summary The painting therefore appears to be in very good and stable condition and would benefit from revarnishing.
"This lot is offered for sale subject to Sotheby's Conditions of Business, which are available on request and printed in Sotheby's sale catalogues. The independent reports contained in this document are provided for prospective bidders' information only and without warranty by Sotheby's or the Seller."

Catalogue Note

The Heward Bells were a wealthy family from the North of England, who subsequently set up in a house in Wiltshire. William Heward Bell, father of the girls in the painting, was born in 1849, of a Durham coal-owning family. He married Hannah Cory in 1874, and lived at Cleeve House at Seend in Wiltshire. The brother of Lorna and Dorothy was Clive (Heward) Bell (1881-1964), the modernist art critic and husband of the painter Venessa Bell, one of the leading members of the Bloomsbury Group. Frances Spalding, in her biography of Vanessa Bell, makes clear that the Bell parents were not in any way artistic, implying that they were fairly conventional members of the late Victorian nouveau riche. It makes an interesting background to Clive Bell and to Clive and Vanessa's son Quentin Bell – one of the pioneers in the revival of interest in Victorian art, as the author of a biography of John Ruskin and the book Victorian Artists (1967).

Like fellow expatriate Americans James Mc Neill Whistler (1834-1903) and John Singer Sargent (1856-1925), Shannon was a powerful presence in British painting during the nineteenth century's closing decades. Born in Aubrun, New York, he had spent an itinerant childhood in the United States before travelling alone to London in 1878. There, he enrolled at the National Art Training School in South Kensington (later the Royal College of Art) and began to fashion a complete artistic identity under the tutelage of its reformist principal, the French-trained Sir Edward John Poynter (1836-1919). Shannon made his debut at the Royal Academy in 1881, with The Honourable Horatia Stopford, Queen Victoria's Lady-in-Waiting. The portrait had been commissioned by none other than the Queen herself, on Poynter's recommendation, and its showing at the Academy marked the beginning of a glittering career as a society portraitist within the British art establishment.

However, no doubt as a result of Poynter's teaching, Shannon also developed strong links with the British avant-garde. As his stature and demand as a portraitist grew during the 1880s, he aligned himself with the new generation of French-taught painters grouped around Henry Herbert La Thangue (1859-1929) and Sir George Clausen (1852-1944). Fired by the aesthetic politics of Jules Bastien-Lepage (1848-1884) and Carolus-Duran (1838-1917), these artists generated one of the more profound challenges to the art institutions of their nation. Formed in 1886, the New English Art Club, of which Shannon was also a founding member, was initially to have been called the Society of Anglo-French Artists and loudly proclaimed itself an alternative to the Royal Academy regime.

Indeed, while superficially a belle époque portrait of generic type, the present work reveals itself on closer examination to be a visually erudite work that fuses the elements of its creator's formation. Not least important is the painting's juxtaposition of the British tradition of academic portraiture – Gainsborough, through Reynolds and Lawrence – with trends of French modernism. The emphasis on form created through tonal values rather than line, which had been Poynter's dictum in South Kensington, is clearly in evidence in Lorna and Dorothy Bell. And in the bravura brushwork – that plays off the dark taffeta and feather boa worn by Dorothy against the brilliant white organdy of Lorna's dress – is demonstrated Shannon's conception of the work as at once a naturalistic representation and a two-dimensional aesthetic pattern.
CN