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Notes
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This portrait formed part of the Bennet Woodcroft Bequest, which was among the founding collections of the Science Museum. Woodcroft had developed a 'National Gallery of Portraits of Inventors, Discoverers and Introducers of the Useful Arts’ combining gifts, loans and purchases of portraits while acting as the first curator of the Patent Museum. This painting is possibly by Thornton Rippingille, an artist to whom Bennet Woodcroft gave several portrait commissions. Rippingille informed Woodcroft in July 1860 that he was painting Kay, and in November of the same year he sent the portrait to Woodcroft. Rippingille said that he copied the portrait from a photograph of a painting but did not know any further details. It is therefore unclear whether the photograph was of another copy or of the eighteenth-century original.
In April of 1860, Woodcroft promised to share with Rippingille his preferred dimensions for copies derived from smaller portraits. These dimensions are the ‘three-quarter length’ (also known as bust-length) size, standardised in London by the 1650s, of around 30 x 25 inches. The dimensions of this painting of Kay match Woodcroft’s specification, making it possible that this is the Rippingille copy.
On 9 August 1860, Thomas Oldham Barlow wrote to Woodcroft asking to borrow the copy of Kay. It is unclear whether he was referring to the copy by Rippingille or another copy. If it was Rippingille’s, Woodcroft must have had possession of it before Rippingille sent it in November 1860.
This is the only copy that remains in the SMG Collection. Woodcroft would have been pleased to receive this version in his preferred size, particularly because he disliked oval portraits.
Title
John Kay (1704–1764)
Date
1860
Medium
oil on canvas
Measurements
H 76.5 x W 64 cm
Accession number
1921-1076
Acquisition method
Bennet Woodcroft Bequest, 1921
Work type
Painting