Portrait of George Canning explained

George Canning
Artist:Thomas Lawrence
Year:1826
Type:Oil on canvas, portrait
Height Metric:238.1 «
Width Metric:147.3
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in
Museum:National Portrait Gallery
City:London

George Canning is an 1826 full-length portrait by the British artist Thomas Lawrence of the statesman George Canning, a leading Tory politician. His career had been seriously disrupted by his 1809 duel with his cabinet colleague Lord Castlereagh, until his appointment as Foreign Secretary in 1822 after Castlereagh's suicide led him to a revival. He is shown speaking in the House of Commons. It was painted around the same time as Lawrence was depicting Canning's colleague the Duke of Wellington. Commissioned by Robert Peel, it was one of eight portraits he exhibited at the Royal Academy that year. It received qualified praise from fellow painter John Constable.[1] The following year Canning became Prime Minister in succession to Lord Liverpool, but suffering from poor health died at Chiswick House after just 119 days in office. It is now part of the collection of the National Portrait Gallery in London.[2]

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Notes and References

  1. Levey p.269
  2. https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw01046/George-Canning National Portrait Gallery