Thomas Gainsborough, R.A. (Sudbury, Suffolk 1727-1788 London)
Thomas Gainsborough, R.A. (Sudbury, Suffolk 1727-1788 London)

Portrait of Lady Anne Thistlethwaite, Countess of Chesterfield (1759-1798), bust-length, in a blue dress

Details
Thomas Gainsborough, R.A. (Sudbury, Suffolk 1727-1788 London)
Portrait of Lady Anne Thistlethwaite, Countess of Chesterfield (1759-1798), bust-length, in a blue dress
oil on canvas
30 x 25 in. (76.2 x 63.5 cm.)
Provenance
by descent from the sitter to Lieutenant-Colonel Evelyn William Thistlethwaite, and by descent to his nephew,
Frank-Hugh Pakenham Borthwick-Norton, who married Eva Sardinia Borthwick-Norton, by whose executors bequeathed to
The Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh.
The Property of The Royal Scottish Academy sold to establish The Borthwick-Norton Bequest; Sotheby's, London, 30 June 2005, lot 84 (£110,400), to the present owner.
Literature
E.K. Waterhouse, 'Preliminary check list of Portraits by Thomas Gainsborough', The Walpole Society, XXXIII, 1953, p. 21.
E.K. Waterhouse, Gainsborough, London, 1958, p. 59, no. 142.

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Alexis Ashot
Alexis Ashot

Lot Essay

The sitter was the daughter of the Revd. Thomas Thistlethwaite, of Norman Court, Hampshire, and his wife Selina, daughter of Peter Bathurst, of Clarendon Park, Wiltshire. On 20th August 1777 she married Philip Stanhope, 5th Earl of Chesterfield (1755-1815) who had succeeded to the title in 1773. They lived at Bretby Hall, Derbyshire, and at Chesterfield House in London, the magnificent mansion built by the 4th Earl.

To commemorate their marriage in 1777, Chesterfield commissioned Gainsborough to paint full-length portraits of his wife and himself (figs. 1 & 2). From these sittings, Gainsborough executed a further two bust-length portraits of the Countess (the other and its companion of the Earl are in the Shirley Collection, Loch Fea, Ireland).

The present portrait, probably dating to 1778, is executed with remarkably free and fluent brushstrokes, most notably in the diaphanous wrap and blue satin dress, and exudes the confidence of an artist who had secured royal patronage with the exhibition of his portraits of the Duke and Duchess of Cumberland (London, The Royal Collection) at the Academy in the previous year.

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