Sir Joshua Reynolds and Edmund Burke were friends, the artist made the statesman one of his executors and left him #2,000 in his will. Reynolds was at his greatest in portraying men of intellect and in Burke he not only found a friend but one of the most brilliant minds and most powerful orators of the eighteenth century. Towards the end of his life Burke, an Irishman, was elected Lord Rector of Glasgow University.
Sir Joshua Reynolds (English, 1723 - 1792)
Reynolds was born in Plympton, Devon, the son of a headmaster. He was apprenticed to the London portrait painter, Thomas Hudson, in 1740. In 1749 he went to Italy, spending two years in Rome. On his return, in 1753, he set up a studio in London. Reynolds developed a portrait style which attempted to marry the sitter's need for a fashionable likeness with the complexity of traditional religious and historical painting. His compositions are usually interesting but his technique was often unsound, and many of his pictures have deteriorated badly. He was a founding member of the Royal Academy of Arts and its first president, a position of huge influence which Reynolds used to set the future course of British art.