About this artwork
This is a fascinating example of the interior ‘conversation pieces’ or informal group portraits in which Allan specialised from 1780. His middle-class patrons John Caw, a founder member of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, John Bonar and James Bruce were all Edinburgh tax officials. Caw’s deceased nephew Thomas, a physician, is associated with this group through his portrait on the back wall. Bruce is shown discussing an engraving after Raphael’s Saint John the Baptist in the Wilderness (Uffizi, Florence).
Updated January 2022
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artist:David AllanScottish (1744 - 1796)
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title:The Connoisseurs
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date created:1783
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materials:Oil on canvas
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measurements:87.50 x 101.90 cm; Framed: 106.20 x 117.50 x 9.50 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Purchased 1963
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accession number:NG 2260
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gallery:
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depicted:
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subject:
David Allan
David Allan
Allan was born in Alloa, on the River Forth, and attended the Foulis Academy in Glasgow for seven years. In 1767 he moved to Rome, where he lived for ten years; this was the most successful period of his life. In Rome, Allan painted ambitious historical pictures, portraits, caricatures and genre...