April 18, 2024

New Copy, "Lady Caroline Howard, 1778", by Sir Joshua Reynolds

Today was Day 1 of my copy of "Lady Caroline Howard, 1778" by Sir Joshua Reynolds. I had walked around the museum searching for potential paintings to copy, and this one was on my list. This intelligent-looking seven-year-old girl in her very fancy clothes, examining a rose bush under a dramatic sky, appealed to me. I also liked where the painting was hanging, right in the middle of a wall with a large open space that ended at the side of the couches that were in the middle of the room - I could set up a good distance away, have a good view of the whole painting, and not be in anybody's way.

This is the original painting:


At 56 5/16 x 44 1/2 in., it's a large painting. We are only allowed up to 40" on the larger side. I happened to have a canvas already stretched and ready that measured 36" x 21" and that's close enough to the right proportions, so I used that.

I have to admit that I was not familiar with Sir Joshua Reynolds, so I read up on him a little bit. This is from the description of the painting on the NGA's website: 

"Reynolds deliberately imposed on his compositions certain formal artistic qualities that would give them the solidity and nobility of Greek, Roman, and Renaissance art. He also liked to suggest associations in his portraits that elevate them to some level beyond the merely descriptive. Roses are symbolically related to Venus and the Three Graces, and Reynolds may well have intended to allude to their attributes, Chastity, Beauty, and Love, as ideals to which Lady Caroline should aspire." Reynolds was not formally trained, but apprenticed to Thomas Hudson, the most fashionable portraitist of the day, according to the NGA's website. If you're interested, you can read more of Reynolds' biography here.

I got right to work putting some paint down, trying to get the right value and color temperature, mainly trying to cover all the white so I would have something to work against. I had sketched the figure and other elements onto the canvas at home in charcoal, to save time in the museum. I painted for about an hour before I went to lunch (I had gotten in late today), and this is as far as I got:



After lunch, I continued to put colors down. I tried to match the colors I saw, but I always tend to go too bright and plan on neutralizing them more in later passes. The important thing for me is to cover the white, then I can start to make adjustments.

Here is the painting at the end of the day. I didn't put the face or hands in yet, partly because I ran out of red paint, and it was almost time to leave. I've stopped bringing in tubes of paint, since I have to carry it all in a backpack and it's pretty heavy. So I stole a genius idea from other copyists and squeezed my colors out into a "paint garage" which I keep in the freezer between sessions. Next time I'll bring more red paint.



I know that the white dress needs to be much lighter, and I think the black jacket and surrounding landscape should be darker - adjustments I will make next time. I know there's too much blue in my sky, but I think that's what I'm seeing underneath the gray clouds. And of course I'll start the next session by painting in the face, hat, and hands. When I repaint the sky, I'll try to paint in that bit of a rainbow that's visible just to the right of the rose bush. I'm pretty happy with the beginning of this copy and look forward to next time.

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