THE DISTINCTION OF COPLEY

MRS. DANIEL DENISON ROGERS

By Copley.

MRS. FORD

By Copley, in Hartford Athenæum.

In his youth Copley had the slight advantage of some instruction from his stepfather, Peter Pelham, the engraver; but early acquired a style of his own. His technic was not very fluent; but his design was good, his drawing remarkably true, and his characterization unusual. A dignified formality pervaded his canvases, as befitted the sitters of his native Boston. It is said that a Copley portrait in a New England family is a certificate of aristocracy and social standing. He painted textures well, though somewhat laboriously. “Large ruffles, heavy silks, silver buckles, gold-embroidered vests, and powdered wigs are blent in our imagination with the memory of patriot zeal and matronly influence,” writes Tuckerman. But those adjuncts to the personality would not be so associated with the patrician Colonials had not Copley rendered them so well. None of the early painters so accurately gave the spirit of their time as he. As we can glean from Lely’s portraits of the beauties of the Carolean Court the free and easy manners that were its atmosphere, so from Copley’s portraits we get the moral atmosphere of that Colonial time, with the reserve and self-respect of its men and the virtue and propriety of its women. He did not go abroad until he was thirty-seven years old. In England he was well received, and had many commissions. He was made an A. R. A. in 1777, and a full academician in 1779. Shortly after this he was commissioned to paint “The Siege of Gibraltar.” His son, Baron Lyndhurst, became lord chancellor, and collected many of his father’s works.

THE AMERICAN ACADEMY

By Matthew Pratt, in the Metropolitan Museum, New York.