Thomas (Tom) Richmond Jnr (1802-1874) – Photographic Portrait

£150.00

1 in stock

Portrait photograph of the artist: Thomas (Tom) Richmond Jnr (1802-1874) brother of George Richmond RA (1809-1896). Provenance: Walter Coleridge Richmond (1852-1931) son of George Richmond RA, thence by descent in the family.

Image: 2 5/8 x 2 1/8 in. (6.6 x 5.3 cm.)
Mount: 11 3/4 x 8 1/4 in. (29.3 x 21 cm.)

Description

The photo is mounted with a description on the artist written on a separate sheet of paper displayed below the portrait. The inscription reads: Thomas Richmond, son of Thomas Richmond, Ann Orme, born 1802 in Hatton Garden, died 1874 in Windermere. He was the only surviving brother of George Richmond. 5 other brothers died in infancy.

Thomas Richmond was a portrait painter, known for his idealised pictures in the so-called Keepsake style. His father Thomas Richmond (1771–1837), was a miniature painter, and his brother George Richmond RA (1809-1896) was a celebrated portrait painter.

Richmond initially practiced in Sheffield, and later moved to London. His main clientele was among the hunting fraternity. Between 1833 and 1860 he exhibited fifty one portraits in London. He exhibited forty-five portraits at the Royal Academy and six at the Suffolk Street gallery. Richmond’s paintings are close in style to his father’s work, but distinguished by the characteristic use of dark stippling in the background.

Richmond and his brother George had met Ruskin during his trip to Rome in 1840-1. He accompanied him on his visits to galleries. John Ruskin’s father commissioned Richmond to paint his daughter-in-law Effie Gray, Effie wrote of the finished work to her mother: ‘…it is the most lovely piece of oil painting but much prettier than me. I look like a graceful Doll but John and his father are delighted with it’. Ruskin’s father was not as delighted with the portrait of Effie as she believed. He wrote to his son that Thomas was inferior as an artist to his brother: “Tom I regret to say cannot hold a candle to George – It is second rate or lower”.

Tom Richmond died in 1874 at Windermere, where he had purchased an estate but was buried in Brompton Cemetery, London.