The portrait is presented in a good quality and condition antique gilded frame.
Joseph Highmore initially trained as a lawyer, and he was Governor of the Foundling Hospital, but he is best known as a highly successful portrait painter of the Georgian middle class. He was educated at merchant Taylors' School. His father failed to get him started as a painter as pupil of his uncle, Thomas, who had been appointed Sergeant Painter to Queen Anne in 1702, and he was articled to an attorney in 1707. In 1713 he enrolled in Kneller's Academy of Painting on Great Queen Street, and, after his articles expired, set himself up in 1715 as a portrait painter in the City. Highmore was a founding member of the Saint Martin's Land Academy in 1720. Highmore seems to have moved in learned and literary rather than artistic circles. He was himself a writer, chiefly in his retirement. He died in Canterbury in 1780, at the age of eighty-seven.
Measurements: Height 93cm, Width 80cm framed (Height 36.5”, Width 31.5” framed