The blue boy di thomas gainsborough biography

The Blue Boy

Painting by Thomas Gainsborough

This article is about the Gainsborough painting. For other uses, see The Blue Boy (disambiguation).

The Blue Boy (c. ) is a full-length portrait in oil by Thomas Gainsborough, owned by The Huntington in San Marino, California.[2]

History

One of Gainsborough's best known works, The Blue Boy was long thought to be a portrait of Jonathan Buttall (–), the son of a wealthy hardware merchant, because of his early ownership of the painting. This identification has never been proven and as Susan Sloman argued in , the likely sitter is Gainsborough's nephew, Gainsborough Dupont (–).[3] It is a historical costume study as well as a portrait; the youth appears in clothing from the 17th century as the artist's homage to Anthony van Dyck and is very similar to Van Dyck's portraits of young boys, especially his double portrait of brothers George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham, and Lord Francis Villiers.[4]

Gainsborough had already drawn something on the canvas before beginning The Blue Boy, which he painted over. The painting is about life-size, measuring 48 inches (1,&#;mm) wide by 70 inches (1,&#;mm) tall.

In , John Young (–), a printmaker and keeper of the British Institution, published a reproduction of the painting for the first time and told the story of how the artist painted The Blue Boy to contradict the advice of Sir Joshua Reynolds. As president of the Royal Academy of Arts, Reynolds had lectured publicly on the use of warm and cool colours in his Eighth Discourse presented in

It ought, in my opinion, to be indispensably observed, that the masses of light in a picture be always of a warm, mellow colour, yellow, red, or a yellowish white, and that the blue, the grey, or the green colours be kept almost entirely out of these masses, and be used only to support or set off these warm colours; and for this purpose, a small proportion of cold colour will be sufficient. Let this conduct be reversed; let the light be cold, and the surrounding colour warm, as we often see in the works of the Roman and Florentine painters, and it will be out of the power of art, even in the hands of Rubens and Titian, to make a picture splendid and harmonious.[5]

This origination story appealed to the public's perception of the distinctly different personalities of Reynolds and Gainsborough since it set the two artists in opposition. As president of the Royal Academy, Reynolds was a disciplined advocate of history painting who played an active role in curriculum development and delivery, and the presentation of the annual exhibitions. Gainsborough, on the other hand, was a portrait painter and landscapist and remained aloof from any academic functions. Reynolds was knighted in and wrote art criticism and delivered lectures while Gainsborough never received sovereign recognition and wrote lively correspondence as his written legacy. These and other real and imagined differences between the two artists were exaggerated in subsequent reports about the creation of The Blue Boy.

Although it eventually became clear that the painting was completed by Gainsborough eight years before Reynolds' Eighth Discourse, the story about how it resulted from a challenge over warm and cool colours was too good to give up. The repeated erroneous account propelled the painting to international fame.[6]

The painting was in Buttall's possession until he filed for bankruptcy in It was first bought by the politician John Nesbitt and then, in , by the portrait painter John Hoppner. In about , The Blue Boy entered the collection of the Earl Grosvenor and remained with his descendants until its sale by the second Duke of Westminster to the California railroad magnate Henry Edward Huntington in [7] Before its departure to California in , The Blue Boy was briefly put on display at the National Gallery in London, where it was seen by 90, people. The British recognized the loss of Gainsborough's painting in several notable ways including its appearance on stage towards the end of the Mayfair and Montmartre variety show at the New Oxford Theatre in spring Framed on stage, dressed as the boy in the painting, and flanked by cowboys and Indians, the celebrity Nellie Taylor sang Cole Porter's "The Blue Boy Blues".[8]

The Grosvenor family played a significant role in the increasing fame of The Blue Boy during the 19th and early 20th centuries. They not only allowed visitors into their London residence to see the painting, they also frequently lent the painting to important exhibitions, including the Art Treasures Exhibition in Manchester in when The Blue Boy captured the attention of viewers who had likely never previously given much thought to fine art. Gallery guides and exhibition publications passed on the story of the disputed origins of the painting and claimed that "there is nothing which has attracted more universal admiration than this 'far-famed' painting." The painting was subsequently exhibited to much public acclaim at the Great London Exposition in , the Royal Academy and the South Kensington Museum in , the Grosvenor Gallery in , and the Royal Academy in , when it was identified as "the most famous of all of his pictures" by a review in the London Times.[9]

In addition to viewing Gainsborough's Blue Boy in public venues, the painting also appeared in publications and as individual black-and-white and colour prints. It became a popular ceramic figure and showed up in advertisements. The boy in blue also came alive with men, women, boys, and girls dressing up in similar costumes and pretending to be Gainsborough's youth at fancy-dress balls and marriage ceremonies, in pantomimes and plays, and eventually in movies and television programmes.[10]

When girls and women masqueraded as Gainsborough's Blue Boy on stage and screen, they brought about a gradual feminization of the youth. By the early 20th century, Marlene Dietrich was photographed in a Blue Boy costume and Shirley Temple appeared as Gainsborough's youth in the movie Curly Top in Shortly after the painting showed up in the main entrance of the Cleaver family residence during the third season of the Leave it to Beaver show in , viewers increasingly associated feminine traits with the boy in blue, leading to his connection to an emergent gay culture.

In September , The Blue Boy was "outed" in the pages of Mad Magazine in a strip called "Prissy Percy". In the four-panel strip, artist Jack Rickard and writer Frank Jacobs used contemporary stereotypes of homosexuality to contrast Gainsborough's boy in blue with a group of football players. Stereotypes linking The Blue Boy and homosexuality were well established when Hank Ketcham, the creator of "Dennis the Menace," cast Gainsborough's boy in blue as a "sissy" in a multi-panel strip that included a line by Dennis confusing the painter Gainsborough and the Beat poet and gay peacenik Allen Ginsberg.[11]

In , former TV Guide advertising manager Don N. Embinder (a.k.a. Don Westbrook) published the first issue of Blueboy Magazine, an upscale, gay bi-monthly magazine with nude photography, slick advertisements, and articles by writers such as Christopher Isherwood and Randy Shilts. Rescuing Gainsborough's Blue Boy from sissiness, Embrinder introduced him as the embodiment of the recently liberated gay man. The premier issue featured a bright blue cover with a photograph of a young man dressed up as Gainsborough's boy in blue from the waist up. Embinder re-appropriated Gainsborough's Blue Boy from the funny pages and transformed a derogatory stereotype into an emblem of pride.[12]

Among the gay artists who have embraced The Blue Boy as a symbol of gay emancipation are Robert Lambert (a member of Les Petites Bon-Bons), Howard Kottler, and Léopold Foulem.[13]

The Blue Boy was temporarily loaned to the National Gallery, London, and placed on view on 25 January , a century to the day since it left the UK in It remained in the National Gallery for five months before returning to the US permanently.[14][15]

In October , Kehinde Wiley's Portrait of a Young Gentleman was installed opposite to Gainsborough's Blue Boy in the Huntington Museum of Art.

In popular culture

In Quentin Tarantino's film Django Unchained, the main character Django, a freed slave, chooses to wear an outfit similar to that worn by Gainsborough's subject in The Blue Boy.[16]

It inspired the s Garbage Pail Kid "Blue Boy George" (fifth series).

In , the picture was referenced in the song "Art is for Your Heart" on the Muppet Babies episode "The Muppet Museum of Art", with Gonzo wondering about the painting and Kermit stating the subject's possible preference for green clothing.[17]

The painting is seen in the movie Die Another Day (), where it hangs in a London fencing club, and is slashed by Gustav Graves while dueling with James Bond.

The painting is also seen in the movie Batman () as hanging in Gotham museum, and again in the Joker () movie hanging in smaller form in the Joker's apartment.

The third season episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation "Hollow Pursuits" features Reginald Barclay's holodeck replica of Wesley Crusher dressed in an outfit similar to The Blue Boy.

In the introduction of the television series Pee-wee's Playhouse (), the painting can be seen hanging in the background while Pee-wee is singing the theme song.

In the Disney Series Wizards of Waverly Place () the Blue Boy is also shown in Episode 21 of Season 1.

The painting is seen hanging in Vincent Ludwig's office in the film The Naked Gun.

In the movie Ghostbusters 2 (), the character Janosz Poha contrasts a large portrait of the fictional 16th-century sorcerer Vigo the Carpathian with Gainsborough's Blue Boy.

A split-second image in Teacher's Pet shows a parody of the painting featuring Leonard.

Over the credits of Cinderella III: A Twist in Time, a parody of the painting featuring Gus dressed in this outfit is shown.

It appears as an in-game item in the Animal Crossing series.

The Blue Boy inspired pop artist Robert Rauschenberg to pursue a painting career.[18] It is often paired with a painting by Thomas Lawrence called Pinkie that sits opposite to it at the Huntington Library.

On "Mr. Toad's Wild Ride" in Disneyland California, before exiting your car, you can spot a painting of Toad posing while dressed all in blue and holding a feathered hat. This is a Toad-themed reproduction of Gainsborough's oil painting The Blue Boy.[19]

The Blue Boy painting is a heavily-used prop in the Laurel and Hardy comedy Wrong Again.

The painting is also referenced in the movie Coraline as a portrait in the Pink Palace's hearth room.

The painting is seen leaning against the wall in the storage room of the Salem police station in the Season 7 episode of Bewitched 'Samantha's Hot Bedwarmer' which is the second part of the 8 part story arc 'The Salem Saga' ( S7 E4). Production of Bewitched moved to Salem in June due to a fire at the Hollywood studio.

In the BBC sitcom Keeping Up Appearances episode The Country House Sale (series 5, episode 6), Hyacinth is looking to buy a painting that is similar to The Blue Boy.

The Blue Boy is parodied in the Pelswick episode "Wheeldini."[20]

In the episode of The Mary Tyler Moore Show “Rhoda’s Sister Gets Married”, Rhoda’s mother points out the painting in her and Rhoda’s father’s apartment, saying, “Oh well, that’s just a copy”.

The painting has also inspired the name of popular coffee roaster Methodical Coffee's signature blend "Blue Boy".

In the 12/14/ daily Peanuts strip drawn by Charles M. Schulz, the character Schroeder comments that Gainsborough painted “The Blue Boy” the year his favorite composer, Beethoven, was born.

In the Phineas and Ferb episode “Operation Crumb Cake”, Baljeet recreates “The Blue Boy” out of red pepper flakes. The process causes him intense eye pain and he regrets not making an eyewash station.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^Children's Encyclopædia Britannica (see plate). Vol.&#;8. London: Encyclopædia Britannica. p.&#;
  2. ^"Jonathan Buttal: The Blue Boy (c )". The Huntington Library. Archived from the original on 19 June Retrieved 7 December
  3. ^Sloman, Susan (April ). "Gainsborough's 'Blue Boy'". The Burlington Magazine. : –
  4. ^Cherry, Deborah; Jennifer Harris (September ). "Eighteenth-Century Portraiture and the Seventeenth-Century Past: Gainsborough and Van Dyck". Art History. 5 (3): – doi/jtbx.
  5. ^Gower, Ronald Sutherland (). Thomas Gainsborough. G. Bell and Sons. pp.&#;77– Retrieved 2 October &#; via Google Books.
  6. ^Hedquist, Valerie (). Class, Gender, and Sexuality in Thomas Gainsborough's Blue Boy. New York: Routledge. ISBN&#;.
  7. ^Hedquist (). Class, Gender, and Sexuality in Thomas Gainsborough's Blue Boy. pp.&#;33–58, 98–
  8. ^Hedquist (). Class, Gender, and Sexuality in Thomas Gainsborough's Blue Boy. pp.&#;–
  9. ^Hedquist (). Class, Gender, and Sexuality in Thomas Gainsborough's Blue Boy. pp.&#;59–
  10. ^Hedquist (). Class, Gender, and Sexuality in Thomas Gainsborough's Blue Boy. pp.&#;84–
  11. ^Hedquist (). Class, Gender, and Sexuality in Thomas Gainsborough's Blue Boy. pp.&#;–
  12. ^Hedquist (). Class, Gender, and Sexuality in Thomas Gainsborough's Blue Boy. pp.&#;–
  13. ^"Camp Fires: The Queer Baroque of Leopold Foulem, Paul Mathieu, and Richard Milette at the Gardiner Museum". CFonline. Retrieved 31 October
  14. ^"Thomas Gainsborough's Blue Boy to return to the UK after years". BBC. 30 June Retrieved 30 June
  15. ^Stamerg, Susan (15 March ). "A mad scientist and his bird in a bubble: The story behind a peculiar painting". Morning Edition. NPR. Retrieved 15 May
  16. ^"Sharen Davis Costume Interview: Django Unchained". Clothes on Film. 1 January Archived from the original on 23 January Retrieved 22 January
  17. ^"Lyrics to Some of My Songs". Alan O'Day, Songwriter. Retrieved 22 November
  18. ^Tuchman, Phyllis (16 May ). "The Invincible Robert Rauschenberg". Obit Magazine. Retrieved 6 December
  19. ^Shaffer, Joshua (30 March ). "DISNEYLAND: The Blue Boy on Mr. Toad". Discovering The Magic Kingdom. Retrieved 30 March
  20. ^"02x02 - Wheeldini - Transcripts - Forever Dreaming".

Further reading

  • Conisbee, Philip (). "The Ones That Got Away". In Verdi, Richard (ed.). Saved! Years of the National Art Collection Fund. London: Scala.
  • Conlin, Jonathan (). The Nation's Mantelpiece: A history of the National Gallery. London: Pallas Athene.
  • Thicknesse, Philip (). A sketch of the life and paintings of Thomas Gainsborough, Esq.
  • Tyler, David (). "Jonathan Buttall". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

External links

Media related to The Blue Boy at Wikimedia Commons