John Ritchie Findlay of Aberlour, 1824 - 1898. Proprietor of the Scotsman; founder of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery
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About this artwork
In 1882, the Board of Trustees for Fisheries, Manufactures and Improvements in Scotland, a government body which had turned its support from industry to the fine and decorative arts, received an anonymous donation of £10,000 (over £1.2 million today) to ‘set on foot’ a national portrait gallery. At the opening of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery in 1889, the benefactor was identified as John Ritchie Findlay, the proprietor of The Scotsman newspaper. He continued to provide most of the funding for the building and its decoration, contributing over £60,000.This portrait was painted by the president of the Royal Scottish Academy, George Reid. Early in his career, the Aberdeen-born artist had been influenced by French and Dutch realist painters. He later increasingly focused on portraiture, and showed particular sensitivity in portraying male sitters.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Sir George ReidScottish (1841 - 1913)
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title:John Ritchie Findlay of Aberlour, 1824 - 1898. Proprietor of the Scotsman; founder of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery
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date created:Painted 1899
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materials:Oil on canvas
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measurements:76.20 x 61.00 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Given by a number of subscribers 1900
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accession number:PG 590
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gallery:
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subject:
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artwork photographed by:Antonia Reeve
Sir George Reid
Sir George Reid
Reid was born in Aberdeen and worked first as a lithographer before moving to Edinburgh in 1862 to study at the Trustees' Academy. In 1866, supported by the Aberdeen collector, John Forbes White, he went to Holland to study under the landscape and genre painter, Gerrit Mollinger. He became a close...