
Portrait Of Charles Dickens (1812-1870), dated 1840
View Similar Items
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 11
Daniel MaclisePortrait Of Charles Dickens (1812-1870), dated 1840
About the Item
- Creator:Daniel Maclise (1806-1870, British)
- Dimensions:Height: 38 in (96.52 cm)Diameter: 33 in (83.82 cm)
- Medium:
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:Blackwater, GB
- Reference Number:Seller: 7832951stDibs: LU1577214024052
About the Seller
4.9
Platinum Seller
Premium sellers with a 4.7+ rating and 24-hour response times
Established in 2008
1stDibs seller since 2021
271 sales on 1stDibs
Typical response time: 1 hour
Authenticity Guarantee
In the unlikely event there’s an issue with an item’s authenticity, contact us within 1 year for a full refund. DetailsMoney-Back Guarantee
If your item is not as described, is damaged in transit, or does not arrive, contact us within 7 days for a full refund. Details24-Hour Cancellation
You have a 24-hour grace period in which to reconsider your purchase, with no questions asked.Vetted Professional Sellers
Our world-class sellers must adhere to strict standards for service and quality, maintaining the integrity of our listings.Price-Match Guarantee
If you find that a seller listed the same item for a lower price elsewhere, we’ll match it.Trusted Global Delivery
Our best-in-class carrier network provides specialized shipping options worldwide, including custom delivery.More From This Seller
View AllPortrait Of Søren Kierkegaard (1813-1855), 19th Century European School
Located in Blackwater, GB
Portrait Of Søren Kierkegaard (1813-1855), 19th Century
European School - unfinished study
Large 19th Century European School unfinished portrait of Danish Philosopher Søren Kierke...
Category
19th Century Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Self Portrait Of Sir Joshua Reynolds (1723-1792), 18th Century English School
Located in Blackwater, GB
Self Portrait Of Sir Joshua Reynolds (1723-1792), 18th Century
English School
Large 18th Century English Self portrait of painter Sir Joshua Reynolds, oil on canvas. Excellent qual...
Category
18th Century Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
The Procession Of Joan Of Arc, The Siege Of Orléans, 19th Century French School
Located in Blackwater, GB
The Procession Of Joan Of Arc, The Siege Of Orléans, 19th Century
French School
Large 19th Century French School panorama of Joan Of Arc at the Siege of Orleans, oil on canvas. Exc...
Category
19th Century Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Portrait of Roland Laura & Stephen Astley Kennard, 19th Century
By Joseph Farquharson
Located in Blackwater, GB
Portrait of Roland Laura & Stephen Astley Kennard, 19th Century
by Joseph FARQUHARSON (1846-1935)
Large 19th Century Scottish portrait of Laura and Stephen Astley Kennard, oil on canvas by Joseph Farquharson. Excellent quality and condition example of the famous Scottish painters...
Category
19th Century Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
$14,665 Sale Price
20% Off
The Death Of King William II, dated 1866 by Alexander Davis Cooper (1820-1895)
Located in Blackwater, GB
The Death Of King William II, dated 1866
by Alexander Davis Cooper (1820-1895)
Huge 19th Century Pre-Raphaelite Hunting scene depicting the Death of King William II, oil on canvas by Alexander David Cooper. Exhibition scale and quality panoramic scene of the Death Of King William II while hunting. The has been a lot of speculation as to the nature of his death whether it was an accident or murder. Presented in an antique renaissance style frame...
Category
19th Century Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Alexander Davis CooperThe Death Of King William II, dated 1866 by Alexander Davis Cooper (1820-1895)
$11,406 Sale Price
20% Off
Studio Of Sir Peter Lely - Portrait Of Lady Francklin Of Bedfordshire
By Sir Peter Lely
Located in Blackwater, GB
Portrait Of Lady Francklin of Bedfordshire, 17th Century
Studio of Sir Peter Lely (1618-1680)
Fine 17th Century English portrait of Lady Fr...
Category
17th Century English School Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
$7,061 Sale Price
20% Off
You May Also Like
"In the Flowers, " Oil Painting
By Mikael Olson
Located in Denver, CO
Mikael Olson's (US based) "In the Flowers" is an original, handmade oil painting that depicts a feminine face peeking from behind wild flower blooms as they weave across the canvas.
Category
2010s Impressionist Portrait Paintings
Materials
Oil, Canvas
Portrait of Lady Caroline Price
By George Romney
Located in Miami, FL
DESCRIPTION: Perhaps the best Romney in private hands. If Vogue Magazine existed in the late 18th century, this image of Lady Caroline Price would be ...
Category
1970s Old Masters Portrait Paintings
Materials
Oil, Canvas
Spanish Souvenir- mantilla, peineta, gilet
By Francis Luis Mora
Located in Miami, FL
Spanish Souvenir- mantilla, peineta, by Francis Luis Mora is a painting of beautiful Spanish women in traditional dress with their entourage. It's is a museum-quality work. In fact, ...
Category
1920s Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Canvas
Sailor Smoking a Pipe
By Arthur David McCormick
Located in London, GB
Sailor Smoking a Pipe
Arthur David McCormick
Oil on canvas
Image size: 19 x 25 1/2 inches (48 x 65 cm)
Contemporary frame
Arthur David McCormick (1860–1943) was a notable British illustrator and painter, renowned for his landscapes, historical scenes, naval subjects, and genre scenes. Born in Coleraine, County Londonderry, he pursued his education at the Royal College of Art in London from 1883 to 1886.
McCormick’s career was marked by his contributions to various illustrated magazines, including the English Illustrated Magazine and the Illustrated London News. He participated in significant expeditions, such as Sir Martin Conway’s journey to the Karakoram Himalayas in 1892 and Clinton T. Dent’s expedition to the Caucasus Mountains in 1895. His illustrations from these travels were featured in Conway’s book “Climbing and Exploration in the Karakoram-Himalayas” (1894) and his own publication “An Artist in the Himalayas” (1895).
Throughout his career, McCormick illustrated nearly thirty books, focusing on travel and adventure themes. Some of his notable works include illustrations for Edgar Allan Poe’s “Tales of Mystery and Imagination” (1905) and Henry Newbolt’s “Drake’s Drum and Other Songs of the Sea” (1914). He was also a regular exhibitor at the Royal Academy from 1889 to 1938.
Navy Cut Sailor Work...
Category
20th Century English School Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Portrait of a Young Man Oil Painting Celebrated 20th Century Artist
By Oliver Messel
Located in London, GB
Oliver Messel
1904 - 1978
Portrait of a Young Man
Oil on canvas, signed and dated 'Oliver Messel 1930' (on the stretcher)
Image size: 30 x 25 inches (76.2 x 63.4 cm)
Original frame
Oliver Messel was born to Leonard and Maud Messel, née Sambourne, on the 13 January 1904 and was the youngest of three children. The family moved to Nymans, the Messel family home in Sussex, from nearby Balcombe in 1915. The house remained in the family until 1953 when it was bequeathed to the National Trust, following a fire in 1947 which destroyed a large portion of the house.
The Messels originated from a line of German Jewish bankers on Leonard’s side, however, both family lines boast a number of artistic influences, including Maud’s father. Maud was brought up at 18 Stafford Terrace, Kensington (now known as the Linley Sambourne House Museum), amongst collections of antique porcelain and eighteenth-century furniture, and with a host of artistic visitors such as Henry Irving and Oscar Wilde.
Oliver’s own upbringing appears to be influenced by his mother's, as the Messel family were also affiliated with artists and writers and were keen collectors of art, filling their home with textiles, paintings and collections of European and Asian fans from travels abroad. It was amongst such treasures that Oliver, Anne and Linley spent their childhood, in addition to the beauty of Nyman’s extensive gardens.
Oliver was schooled at Eton but rather than going up to university was encouraged by family friends, gallery owner Archie Propert and painter and sculptor Glyn Philpot, to attend art school. In 1922 he enrolled at the Slade School of Fine Art in London, where he studied under Henry Tonks. Here, he met the artist Rex Whistler with whom he remained firm friends until Whistler’s death in WW2.
Upon leaving the Slade in 1924 Oliver was apprenticed to the studio of portrait artist John Wells, where he learnt various Old Master painting techniques, and met artists such as Jacob Epstein, Augustus John and William Orpen.
Whilst at the Slade Oliver developed his interest in Papier Mâché masks, a pastime popular amongst many art students at the time. Whilst apprenticed to artist John Wells several of Oliver’s masks were exhibited at the Claridge Gallery, London, alongside pieces by Whistler and other young artists. These were seen by Serge Diaghilev, director of the Ballet Russes, and Charles B. Cochran, a theatrical producer, both of whom made Oliver offers of work.
His first job in the theatre was creating masks for the Ballets Russes’ Zéphyr et Flore, 1925, designed by the French artist Georges Braque, followed by numerous musical revues for Cochran, including Wake Up and Dream!, 1929, with music by Cole Porter. It was during these revues, working with Porter and Noel Coward, that Oliver also began to design headdresses and costumes. In 1932 he was rewarded with his first full commission to design both costume and sets for Helen!, directed by Max Reinhardt. The production design is still celebrated today for its innovative approach and ground-breaking ‘white on white’ aesthetic, which referenced ‘Greek temples, Rococo drapes, Baroque colonnades and Louis XIV carousels’.
The success of Helen! led to further offers within the theatre including Reinhardt’s version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream at the Old Vic in 1937, starring Vivien Leigh as Titania and Robert Helpmann as Oberon, the Jean Cocteau play The Infernal Machine in 1940, and Christopher Fry’s translation of Jean Anouilh’s Ring Round the Moon, 1950.
One of Oliver’s best-known productions during this period was the Russian ballet The Sleeping Beauty, performed by Sadler’s Wells Ballet in 1946 at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. Encompassing over 200 costumes and four set changes, Oliver’s romantic designs were celebrated for bringing colour back to post-war London, and variations on his designs are still used today. Additional designs for the ballet included Comus in 1940, for which he was released from war duties, and Homage to the Queen, choreographed by Frederick Ashton and performed in 1953 for the Queen’s coronation.
His first opera was in 1940 for Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte at the Royal Opera House, followed by a series of productions at the newly founded Glyndebourne Opera House in Sussex, for which Oliver also designed the proscenium arch. He triumphed in 1956 designing a season of four different productions for their Mozart bicentennial, also providing illustrations for the programme covers.
His popularity also spread beyond theatre to film, were he worked on over eight different feature films including Romeo and Juliet, 1936, directed by George Cukor. During a three-month research trip to Italy Oliver collected over 3,000 reference images including postcards of artwork by Piero della Francesca, Giovanni Bellini and Leonardo da Vinci, along with prints and photographs of textiles and architectural features.
A production of Gabriel Pascal’s Caesar and Cleopatra, 1946, starring Vivien Leigh and Claude Rains, was celebrated for Oliver’s ability to recreate the opulence and luxury of ancient Egypt under the constraints of wartime rationing. Such was his skill that Vivien Leigh in a letter to Oliver declared that “I have of course told Pascal that nobody in the world must do the costumes except you.” He was later nominated for an Academy Award for his work on his final film Suddenly, Last Summer, 1959; an adaptation of Tennessee Williams’ American Southern Gothic mystery.
Having started his artistic career as a portrait apprentice, capturing the faces of family and friends, Oliver continued to develop this practice until the end of his life. His style is said to have been influenced by Glyn Philpot, the Messel’s family friend who encouraged Oliver from an early age in his pursuit of art and design. His most prolific period came in the 1950s during which he produced over 50 portraits, which were shown in exhibitions in New York, London and Barbados.
The exhibitions included both well-known faces and anonymous sitters captured on Oliver’s travels, and a number of these works have entered private collections. He continued to paint after moving to the Caribbean in 1966, capturing society figures and the rich and famous including fashion designer Carolina Herrera and Bianca Jagger. His style remained unchanged throughout his career, using the same soft painterly strokes and subtle palette as in his theatre designs.
By far his greatest contribution in addition to theatre and film was Oliver’s interior and architectural designs.
Another, much celebrated commission included Rayne shoe shop in Old Bond Street, where he created jewel-like interiors using the same practice of scaled models as his set designs. Other notable interior designs include those for Norwich and Bath Assembly Rooms, Flaxley Abbey in Gloucestershire, Rosehill Theatre in Cumbria and the Reader’s Digest offices in Paris.
However, upon moving to Barbados in 1966, Oliver embraced a new career envisioning architectural concepts for private houses, hotels and public buildings, utilising his experience with interior design to furnish them with bespoke items of furniture and textiles. His first project was Maddox, the deserted eighteenth-century plantation house bought by himself and his partner Vagn Riis-Hansen in 1964. The existing building and gardens were remodelled to Oliver’s designs embracing an inherent theatricality with views out to sea. These were framed by terraces and verandas which extended out from the living rooms creating what is often referred to as a Caribbean style of ‘indoor-outdoor’ living. For the woodwork he used a shade of green that is now known as ‘Messel green’ and often associated with the island of Barbados.
Oliver was born into a wealthy family; he travelled extensively and was exposed to art and culture from a young age. A privileged youth, his name is often mentioned amongst the ‘Bright Young Things’, for whom costume parties at country houses and jaunts to Europe on a whim became a thing of fable. This informal group included people such as Cecil Beaton (a life-long friend whom Oliver first met at Eton), Lord Berners, Noel Coward, John Betjeman, Harold Acton, Nancy Mitford, Edith Sitwell, Stephen Tennant...
Category
20th Century Modern Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Circus Acrobats - ( Friends with Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo )
Located in Miami, FL
As they take center stage, four acrobats are depicted, forming an architectural structure composed of contorted human bodies. The small gallery of onlookers displays a variety of ex...
Category
1930s American Realist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Recently Viewed
View AllMore Ways To Browse
Edward Tayler
Elizabeth Hawes
Emile Wauters
End Of Day Edward Curtis
Filippo Marantonio
Frederic Henri Schopin
George Mott
George Sass
Girl Portrait 1700
Hunt Slonem Her Majesty
Hunt Slonem Queen Elizabeth
Ivan Guayasamin
Joan Cruspinera
Jocelyn Wildenstein
John De Critz
John Gotti
King George Iv Portrait Miniature
Leonie Lebas