|
Date: |
|
Description: | This is a copy after an original by Ary Scheffer, painted in 1855, now in the National Portrait Gallery (NPG 315). When the portrait was first exhibited in 1856, it received mixed responses; while the quality of the painting was not in doubt, the quality of the likeness was questioned by many. Dickens himself was unsure about the resemblance, writing to John Forster; 'it does not look to me at all like', though he did allow that, 'it is always possible that I don't know my own face'. Dickens met Scheffer in Paris in October 1855. Scheffer, who was a renowned artist, introduced Dickens to Parisian society and insisted on painting his portrait. Although Dickens apparently admired Scheffer greatly, he found the process of sitting for a portrait a particularly onerous duty, admitting to John Forster; 'I can scarcely express how uneasy and unsettled it makes me to sit, sit, sit, with little Dorrit on my mind.' | Subjects: | portrait (Charles Dickens) | Source: | Vads | Creator: | Artist: Stewart, Malcolm (British artist, 1826-1916) Æ After Scheffer, Ary (Dutch painter, printmaker, and sculptor, 1795-1858, active in France) | Identifier: | http://www.vads.ac.uk/large.php?uid=8847... | Go to resource |
|
|