Gavin Hamilton (artist)

Gavin Hamilton

Gavin Hamilton by Ozias Humphry, 1778, pencil, NGS
Born Gavin Hamilton
1723
Lanarkshire, Scotland
Died 4 January 1798 (aged 7475)
Rome, Italy
Nationality Scots

Gavin Hamilton (1723, Lanarkshire – 4 January 1798, Rome) was a Scots neoclassical history painter,[1] who is more widely remembered for his hunts for antiquities in the neighbourhood of Rome. These roles in combination made him an arbiter of neoclassical taste.[2]

Biography

Gavin Hamilton was born in Scotland in 1723 in Lanarkshire, into the prominent family for whom the town of Hamilton, South Lanarkshire was named, headed by the dukes of Hamilton. In 1738 he became a student of classics at the University of Glasgow.

By 1744 he was in Italy, and probably studied in Rome in the studio of Agostino Masucci. From 1748 to 1750 he shared an apartment with Gilbert Stuart and Revett, and with them visited Naples and Venice. On returning to Britain, he spent several years portrait-painting in London (1751–1756). At the end of that period, he returned to Rome. He lived there for more than the next four decades, until his death in 1798.

Aside from a few portraits of friends, the Hamilton family, and British people on the Grand Tour, most of his paintings, many of which are very large, were of classical Greek and Roman subjects. His most famous is a cycle of six paintings from Homer's Iliad. As engraved by Domenico Cunego and reproduced, these were widely disseminated widely and were enormously influential. Also influential was Hamilton's Death of Lucretia (1760s), also known as the Oath of Brutus. This inspired a series of "oath paintings" by European painters, which included Jacques-Louis David's noted Oath of the Horatii (1784).

As a painter of classical subjects, Hamilton was highly regarded by Johann Joachim Winckelmann, writer Goethe, young sculptor Antonio Canova and others in Rome, but was less appreciated in Britain. He did receive a commission to paint the altar piece of Sant'Andrea degli Scozzesi, the Scottish national church in Rome, for which he portrayed the Martyrdom of St Andrew.

Venus giving Paris Helen as his wife by Hamilton (1782–1784), held by the Palazzo Braschi, Rome

As an art dealer and archaeologist, Hamilton undertook excavations at Hadrian's Villa in Tivoli in 1769–1771, at first to acquire marble for his sculptor to restore sculptures. His excavators reopened the outlet of a low-lying swampy area and "after some weeks' work underground by lamp-light and up to the knees in muddy water" retrieved sculptures from the muck, where they had been thrown centuries before with timber when Christians levelled the sacred grove.(Smith 1901:308). From 1771 Hamilton excavated other sites in the environs of Rome: Cardinal Flavio Chigi's Tor Colombaro, 1771–72, Albano, 1772, Monte Cagnolo 1772–73, Ostia 1774–75, the Villa Fonseca on the Caelian Hill in Rome, Roma Vecchia (the Villa dei Quintili), ca 1775 Castel di Guido and Gabii.[3]

In an age when restorations to Roman sculptures were broadly conceived and the refinishing of whole surfaces was still common practice, Hamilton maintained a reputation as an honest man who did not tamper unduly with the sculptures that passed through his hands.[4] Hamilton sold many of the works of art he recovered to his British clients, most notably to Charles Townley, to whom the painter wrote: "the most valuable acquisition a man of refined taste can make, is a piece of fine Greek Sculpture";[5] and to William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne at Shelburne, later Lansdowne House, London.[6] In 1771 Hamilton discovered the Warwick Vaseat Hadrian's Villa. He sold it to Sir William Hamilton, a connoisseur and the British envoy at Naples.

Gavin Hamilton worked closely with Giovanni Battista Piranesi. He was an early advisor of Antonio Canova, a young sculptor whom he met at a dinner party in December 1779 on Canova's first visit to Rome. The painter advised the younger man to put aside his early, Rococo manner and concentrate on conflating the study of nature with the best of antiquities and a narrow range of classic modern sculptors.[7]

In 1785 Hamilton bought Leonardo da Vinci's Virgin of the Rocks and sent it to London for sale. His purchase was the version now held by the National Gallery, London.

Such hunting and sale of antiquities was considered a marginally shady undertaking. Hamilton was successful in making generous offerings to the Vatican's Museo Pio-Clementino, as the Pope claimed one-third of all excavated works and had the right to forbid export of outstanding treasures.[8] In addition, Hamilton paid landowners for excavating rights, so kept his peace with them.

He died on 4 January 1798.

Further reading

See also

Notes

  1. A Grande História da Arte (Vol 16)
  2. David Irwin, "Gavin Hamilton: Archaeologist, Painter, and Dealer" The Art Bulletin 44.2 (June 1962:87–102).
  3. A. H. Smith, "Gavin Hamilton's Letters to Charles Townley," The Journal of Hellenic Studies, 21 (1901), pp. 306–321; Irwin, David. (1962) "Gavin Hamilton: Archaeologist, Painter and Dealer”, in The Art Bulletin 44:2, pp. 87–102;
  4. Irwin 1962:89, noting J.T. Smith's assessment in Nollekins and His Times, vol. I:207f.
  5. Quoted Irwin 1962:88.
  6. Gavin Hamilton's long series of letters to Lord Shelburne survive. Other purchasers included the Hon. Charles Greville, Lord Temple at Stowe, James Hugh Smith-Barry of Marbury Hall, Cheshire, and, in Rome, Pope Clement XIV for his museum at the Vatican, Cardinal Alessandro Albani for his Villa Albani, and his fellow antiquities hunter, Thomas Jenkins.
  7. Irwin 1962:87ff.
  8. Francis Haskell and Nicholas Penny, Taste and the Antique (Yale University Press) 1981, p. 66f.

External links

Act V, Scene III of Shakespeare's Coriolanus. Engraved by James Caldwell from the painting by Gavin Hamilton.
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