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Self-Portrait

John Smart1802

The Cleveland Museum of Art

The Cleveland Museum of Art
Cleveland, United States

This self-portrait depicts the artist’s almost full face with blue-gray eyes; gray, curly hair and sideburns; and a ruddy
complexion. In spite of the fact that it was no longer in fashion, the powder on his collar indicates that even in 1802 John Smart continued to powder his hair. He wears a dark blue coat with brass buttons; white stock collar, bow, and frill; and deep yellow waistcoat. Arthur Jaffé has argued that the yellow waistcoat also seen in Smart’s portrait in the National Gallery, London, indicates his Whiggish political proclivities. The background of the miniature is yellowish gray, and it is signed at the lower left: “JS / 1802.” The silver-gilt frame is probably original, but the gold monogram JS, placed over an opalescent background, may have been added later.
The portrait was formerly in the collection of William Henry Bose, who was Smart’s great-grandson. The Bose collection of Smart sketches and preparatory studies was sold 15 February 1937 at Christie’s, London, but the self-portrait was retained and lent to the Victoria and Albert Museum. In her biography of Smart, Daphne Foskett notes that in 1913 William Bose received a letter from the Reynolds Galleries in London informing him that “Smart’s miniatures were not then selling quite as well as they formerly did, and that the average price of a male portrait was from £20 to £30 and for a lady, young and good-looking, from £30 to £70.” In 1947, over three decades later, the market had revived, and the self-portrait sold for £360.
In her <em>Dictionary of British Miniature Painters</em>, Foskett notes that Smart painted nine self-portraits, but she does not list them. Having executed at least nine self-portraits during two decades of his mature career, Smart seemed more invested in recording his changing likeness than most of his miniature-painting contemporaries. This attitude of consistent introspection and careful attention to the conservation of his skills outside of the pressures of a commission is in keeping with his practice of executing and retaining highly finished preliminary studies of his sitters for their portraits.
In each of his self-portraits, Smart is conservatively dressed and coiffed, with the ruddy complexion and slightly amused expression found in so many of the portraits he painted. Portraits of Smart by other artists reiterate both the humor
and intensity seen in the self-portraits.

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  • Title: Self-Portrait
  • Creator: John I Smart (British, 1741-1811)
  • Date Created: 1802
  • Physical Dimensions: Framed: 7 x 5.7 cm (2 3/4 x 2 1/4 in.); Unframed: 6.9 x 5.4 cm (2 11/16 x 2 1/8 in.)
  • Provenance: Collection of the Artist, John Smart (1741-1811), by inheritance to his son, John James Smart, John James Smart (1805-1870), by inheritance to his daughter Mary Ann Bose, Mary Ann Bose (née Smart, 1856–1934), by inheritance to her son William H. Bose, William H. Bose (1875-1957), (Sale: Christie's London, December 17, 1945, lot 18)., Robert H. Rocklliff (d. 1963), (Sale: Sotheby's London, November 11, 1945, lot 119)., H.E. Backer, dealer, London, England on commission, Dr. C.H. Samuelson, Greenacre, Exeter. England, Edward B. Greene (1878-1957), Cleveland, OH, gifted to the Cleveland Museum of Art, The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH
  • Type: Portrait Miniature
  • Rights: CC0
  • External Link: https://clevelandart.org/art/1952.95
  • Medium: watercolor on ivory in a gold frame
  • Inscriptions: signed left: J S / 1802
  • Fun Fact: John Smart signed this self-portrait with his initials in the lower left along with the date it was made, 1802.
  • Department: Modern European Painting and Sculpture
  • Culture: England, early 19th Century
  • Credit Line: The Edward B. Greene Collection
  • Collection: Mod Euro - Painting 1800-1960
  • Accession Number: 1952.95
The Cleveland Museum of Art

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