Adapted from the Tate's website:
Huddesford was baptized on 7 December 1749 and, after leaving Winchester, enrolled at Trinity College, Oxford, where his father was President. In 1771 he was granted a fellowship at New College, although he gave it up the following year, having "married his girl friend hastily in London, carried away by youthful passion." Shortly afterwards he studied painting under Reynolds. However, it was his satirical poem Warley, published in two parts between October and December 1778, that first gained him notoriety as a wit, and which must have been written at the very time the present portrait was being painted. He subsequently trained as a clergyman. He died in London on 7 October 1809, aged fifty-nine.
John Codrington Warwick Bampfylde was born on 24 August 1754, the younger son of Sir Richard Warwick Bampfylde, 4th Baronet, of Poltimore, Devon. John Bampfylde was a gifted poet and musician, his ability to improvise at the keyboard being regarded as "most original and most extraordinary" by the composer and music teacher William Jackson. According to Jackson, Bampfylde expressed a romantic wish to live in solitude in the country, dedicating his life to his music and poetry. However, under pressure from his family Bampfylde moved to London, where he fell desperately in love with Reynolds's niece, Mary Palmer. In 1778 Bampfylde dedicated a volume of sonnets to her and, in 1779, a poem entitled To Miss Palmer's Pet Monkey, whose privileged position he contrasted to his own wretched state. Sadly, Miss Palmer rejected his advances, and he lapsed into insanity. Bampfylde spent the remainder of his life in a "private madhouse" in Sloane Street, recovering his mind briefly, just before his death from tuberculosis in December 1797.
Your stories are so interesting. I love your background information for the art.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, Andee. : )
Delete'Sadly' but not the young lady's fault I think.
ReplyDeleteI think Miss Palmer made the wisest choice....
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