Master Paintings and Drawings

Master Paintings and Drawings

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 165. Portrait of Captain John Harvey (1740-1794), half-length.

Sold without Reserve

Richard Livesay

Portrait of Captain John Harvey (1740-1794), half-length

No reserve

Lot Closed

October 22, 03:27 PM GMT

Estimate

4,000 - 6,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Sold without Reserve

Richard Livesay

Unknown 1750 - 1826 Southsea

Portrait of Captain John Harvey (1740-1794), half-length


signed and dated middle right: R. Livesay 1796

inscribed on the monument: Sacred to the Memory of John Harvey Esq / late Captain of H.M.S Brunswick who died of the wounds / he received in the Act / of the glorious 1st of June / 1794 / [...] the British & / French Fleets 

oil on canvas

canvas: 15⅛ by 12½ in.; 38.4 by 31.7 cm.

framed: 21½ by 18⅞ in.; 54.6 by 47.9 cm.

With A.W. Boite (according to a label on the reverse)

This portrait commemorates Captain John Harvey (1740-1794), an officer of the British Royal Navy in the 18th century. Celebrated for his success in both the American War of Independence and French Revolutionary Wars, he cultivated the respect and notoriety of many over the course of his career. 


His final battle, known as the Glorious First of June (1 June 1794), was the first and largest naval battle between Great Britain and the first French Republic during the French Revolutionary Wars. The purpose of this engagement was an attempt to cut off the grain supply between the United States and France. Harvey, captain of a new seventy-four gun ship, the HMS Brunswick, followed the unorthodox orders of Admiral Lord Howe to use his ship to cut the French line. This tactic was considered risky because it placed British ships into close combat with the French too early into the battle. Unlike other British captains, Harvey committed to the maneuver, which ultimately led to bodily injuries that would cause his untimely death a few weeks after the battle. Because of his heroism against the French, a memorial was raised in his honor in Westminster Abbey.