Quick Facts
In full:
Sir Joshua Reynolds
Born:
July 16, 1723, Plympton, Devon, England
Died:
February 23, 1792, London (aged 68)
Movement / Style:
English school

Reynolds preferred the company of men of letters to that of his fellow artists and was friends with Samuel Johnson, Edmund Burke, and Oliver Goldsmith, among others. He never married, and his house was kept for him by his sister Frances.

Reynolds’s state portraits of the king and queen were never considered a success, and he seldom painted for them; but the prince of Wales patronized him extensively, and there were few distinguished families or individuals who did not sit for him. Nonetheless, some of his finest portraits are those of his intimate friends and of fashionable women of questionable reputation.

Unfortunately, Reynolds’s technique was not always entirely sound, and many of his paintings have suffered as a result. After his visit to Italy, he tried to produce the effects of Tintoretto and Titian by using transparent glazes over a monochrome underpainting, but the pigment he used for his flesh tones was not permanent and even in his lifetime began to fade, causing the overpale faces of many surviving portraits. In the 1760s Reynolds began to use more extensively bitumen or coal substances added to pigments. This practice proved to be detrimental to the paint surface. Though a keen collector of old-master drawings, Reynolds himself was never a draftsman, and indeed few of his drawings have any merit whatsoever.

Reynolds’s Discourses Delivered at the Royal Academy (1769–91) is among the most important art criticism of the time. In it he outlined the essence of grandeur in art and suggested the means of achieving it through rigorous academic training and study of the old masters of art.

John Woodward
Quick Facts
Date:
1768 - present
Headquarters:
City of Westminster
Notable Alumni:
Washington Allston

Royal Academy of Arts, principal society of artists in London. Its headquarters, art museum, and educational facilities are located in Burlington House and the Burlington Gardens building, in the borough of Westminster.

(Read Sister Wendy’s Britannica essay on art appreciation.)

The academy was founded in 1768 by a group of 40 artists and architects and was approved by George III. Its collections and classes were first held in Somerset House (now the site of the Courtauld Institute Galleries), but in 1837 the academy was moved to Trafalgar Square and in 1868 to Burlington House. Its galleries contain works by such former members as Joshua Reynolds, Thomas Gainsborough, John Constable, Angelica Kauffmann, and J.M.W. Turner. A particularly notable sculpture is Michelangelo’s Taddei tondo, a work in marble depicting the Virgin Mary, Jesus, and St. John the Baptist. In an annual summer exhibition, the works of contemporary artists are shown. The academy opened a new wing, the Sackler Galleries, in 1991, and in 2001 it purchased an adjacent building in Burlington Gardens, where it hosts contemporary exhibitions. British architect David Chipperfield was enlisted in 2008 to renovate and connect the two buildings, and the project was completed 10 years later, in time for the academy’s 250th anniversary.

(Read Glenn Lowry’s Britannica essay on "Art Museums & Their Digital Future.")

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Alicja Zelazko.