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Oil Paintings By Copley, John Singleton


John Singleton (1738-1815)

  • American painter of portraits and historical subjects

  • Generally acclaimed as the finest artist of colonial America.

  • Biography

       Little is known of Copley's boyhood. He developed within a flourishing school of colonial portraiture, and it was as a portraitist that he reached the high point of his art, and - as his Boston portraits later revealed - he gained an intimate knowledge of his New England subjects and milieu and was able to convey a powerful sense of physical entity and directness - real people seen as they are. From his stepfather, the limner and engraver Peter Pelham, Copley gained familiarity with graphic art as well as an early sense of vocation. Before he was 20 he was an accomplished draughtsman. To the Rococo portrait style derived from the English painter Joseph Blackburn he brought his own powers of imagination and a technical ability surpassing anyone painting in America at the time. Copley, in his portraits, made eloquent use of a Rococo device, the portrait d'apparat - portraying the subject with the objects associated with him in his daily life - that gave his work a liveliness and acuity not usually associated with 18th-century American painting.

       Although he was steadily employed with commissions from the Boston bourgeoisie, Copley wanted to test himself against the more exacting standards of Europe. In 1766, therefore, he exhibited Boy with a Squirrel at the Society of Artists in London. It was highly praised both by Sir Joshua Reynolds and by Copley's countryman Benjamin West. Copley married in 1769. Although he did not venture out of Boston except for a seven-month stay in New York City (June 1771-January 1772), he was urged by fellow artists who were familiar with his work to study in Europe. When political and economic conditions in Boston began to deteriorate (Copley's father-in-law was the merchant to whom the tea that provoked the Boston Tea Party was consigned), Copley left the country - never to return - in June 1774. In 1775 his wife, children, and several other family members arrived in London, and Copley established a home there in 1776.

       His ambitions in Europe went beyond portraiture; he was eager to make a success in the more highly regarded sphere of historical painting. In his first important work, Watson and the Shark (1778), Copley used what was to become one of the great themes of 19th-century Romantic art, the struggle of man against nature. He was elected to the Royal Academy in 1779. Although his English paintings grew more academically sophisticated and self-conscious, in general they lacked the extraordinary vitality and penetrating realism of his Boston portraits. Toward the end of his life, his physical and mental health grew worse. Though he continued to paint with considerable success until the last few months of his life, he was obsessed by the sale (at a loss) of his Boston property and by his increasing debts.

  • Further Reading on Copley

       "T. H. Breen posits that in colonial portraiture the postures and faces of the subjects sometimes were less important, to both painter and sitters, than the clothing, fabrics, and other appurtenances-the consumer goods-with which they were shown. This observation reminds us that Copley lavished equal attention on all parts of his composition, and that his skill at rendering materials played a major role in the way he constructed each painting. As Breen points out, in terms of value the most important British export to America in the eighteenth century was cloth: half of all colonial imports were textiles, and by Copley's era dozens and dozens of fabrics, including every kind and color of satins, velvets, brocades, poplins, cottons, and woolens, had become available. If the portrait was, at least in part, "an object, a thing, an article of commerce, an ornament to be displayed with other possessions" in colonial America, as Breen maintains, then the vast swags of luxuriant fabric that appear in Copley's portraits from the time of his earliest efforts, such as Charles Pelham and Mary and Elizabeth Royall, become understandable as representations of wealth and social position. Curtains had been used in portraits since the Renaissance, both for decorative purposes and to suggest interior spaces adjoining the sitter's space, and English painters of the generation of Thomas Hudson (1701-1779) employed them regularly; but they became nearly ubiquitous in Copley's portraits during the 1760s, joining an array of other materials. He typically placed a curtain on one side of the background or the other in his pictures of both men and women and often included either a draped table or an upholstered chair - all in addition to the fabrics of the rich, complex costumes in which his sitters were dressed. Here as in other details Copley missed the mark in terms of contemporary British usage, for by the 1760s Reynolds, Gainsborough, Allan Ramsay, and the like had long since given up such extensive display of fabrics. Copley's reliance on fabrics was made possible by the settings he utilized, which most often represented either interiors or ambiguous porchlike areas, while the British painters by this time had moved their sitters largely to the out-of-doors."

       "Much as Copley attempted to render the "general air of grandeur" that Reynolds recommended, by posing his sitters with great columns and other lavish props, and much as he may have tried to avoid minuteness (which for Reynolds constituted "the most dangerous error"), especially after this quality was criticized in Boy with a Squirrel, in Boston he was unable to paint in a true English style. Yet his work does come close in spirit or manner to the occasional highstyle English painting of the previous generation by a Hudson or a Joseph Highmore, or to a picture of Copley's own time by such London painters as Ramsay and Francis Cotes, or by one of their provincial colleagues, such as Joseph Wright of Derby, Mason Chamberlin the elder, or Tilly Kettle. These analogies have been little explored and warrant a thorough study of the kind that John Kirk has given to American and British furniture and that Morrison Heckscher and Leslie Bowman have applied to the Rococo style. However, enough work has been done to suggest that despite the increasing anglicization of American taste in the pre-Revolutionary years, when consumers, craftsmen, and painters such as Copley were all looking to London for guidance, remarkably enough there emerged in the arts of the colonies what Kirk concludes was "an American aesthetic," an aesthetic that frequently exhibits conservative, elegant, linear characteristics. Copley's American work thus relates to the paintings of Reynolds and Gainsborough in much the same way that American silver and furniture of the period relate to high-style luxury products made in London."

       From Theodore E. Stebbins, Jr., in "John Singleton Copley in America"




    Sorted by name - [Ascending] - [Descending]
    Name Price Thumbnail Image Description
    Admiral of the Fleet - John Singleton Copley Price
    Was: $219.90
    Now: $109.95
    Admiral of the Fleet - John Singleton Copley
  • Title: Admiral of the Fleet, 1791-94
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Baron Graham - John Singleton Copley Price
    Now: $58.95
    Baron Graham - John Singleton Copley
  • Title: Baron Graham 1804
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Charles Callis Western and His Brother Shirley Western Price
    Was: $139.91
    Now: $76.95
    Charles Callis Western and His Brother Shirley Western
  • Title: Charles Callis Western and His Brother Shirley Western 1783
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Charles Pelham - John Singleton Copley Price
    Was: $219.90
    Now: $109.95
    Charles Pelham -  John Singleton Copley
  • Title: Charles Pelham, 1753-54
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Clark Gayton, Admiral of the White - John Singleton Copley Price
    Was: $96.27
    Now: $52.95
    Clark Gayton, Admiral of the White - John Singleton Copley
  • Title: Clark Gayton, Admiral of the White 1779
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Daniel Crommelin Verplanck - John Singleton Copley Price
    Was: $199.91
    Now: $109.95
    Daniel Crommelin Verplanck - John Singleton Copley
  • Title: Daniel Crommelin Verplanck, 1771
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Ebenezer Storer Price
    Was: $219.90
    Now: $109.95
    Ebenezer Storer
  • Title: Ebenezer Storer, ca. 1767¨C69
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Eleazer Tyng Price
    Was: $96.27
    Now: $52.95
    Eleazer Tyng
  • Title: Eleazer Tyng 1772
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Elkanah Watson Price
    Was: $183.25
    Now: $109.95
    Elkanah Watson
  • Title: Elkanah Watson, 1782
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Epes Sargent Price
    Was: $219.90
    Now: $109.95
    Epes Sargent
  • Title: Epes Sargent, 1959-61
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Ezekiel Goldthwait Price
    Was: $199.91
    Now: $109.95
    Ezekiel Goldthwait
  • Title: Ezekiel Goldthwait, 1771
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • George John, Second Earl Spencer Price
    Was: $199.91
    Now: $109.95
    George John, Second Earl Spencer
  • Title: George John, Second Earl Spencer 1799 - 1806
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Gulian Verplanck Price
    Was: $70.82
    Now: $38.95
    Gulian Verplanck
  • Title: Gulian Verplanck 1771
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Head of a Man Price
    Was: $219.90
    Now: $109.95
    Head of a Man
  • Title: Head of a Man, 1777-78
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Henry Laurens Price
    Was: $195.54
    Now: $89.95
    Henry Laurens
  • Title: Henry Laurens 1782
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Henry Pelham (Boy with a Squirrel) Price
    Was: $199.91
    Now: $109.95
    Henry Pelham (Boy with a Squirrel)
  • Title: Henry Pelham (Boy with a Squirrel), 1765
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Isaac Smith Price
    Was: $96.27
    Now: $52.95
    Isaac Smith
  • Title: Isaac Smith 1769
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Jane Browne Price
    Was: $199.91
    Now: $109.95
    Jane Browne
  • Title: Jane Browne, 1756
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • Jeremiah Lee Price
    Was: $96.27
    Now: $52.95
    Jeremiah Lee
  • Title: Jeremiah Lee 1769
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • John Bours Price
    Was: $96.27
    Now: $52.95
    John Bours
  • Title: John Bours 1763
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
  • John Hancock Price
    Was: $70.82
    Now: $38.95
    John Hancock
  • Title: John Hancock c.1770 - 1772
  • Artist: John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)
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