Arthur Devis
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Arthur Devis (19 February 1712 – 25 July 1787) was an English artist whose father, Anthony, was progenitor of what became a family dynasty of painters and writers. The place of Arthur Devis in art history is generally as painter of the type of portrait now called a
conversation piece A conversation piece refers to a group portrait in a domestic or landscape setting depicting persons chatting or otherwise socializing with each other.Gerard ter Borch">ccessed ..., Gerard ter Borch, Gabriel Metsu, Caspar Netscher and Jacob Ocht ...
. After moving to
London London is the Capital city, capital and List of urban areas in the United Kingdom, largest city of both England and the United Kingdom, with a population of in . London metropolitan area, Its wider metropolitan area is the largest in Wester ...
and apprenticeship to a Flemish topographical artist there, he switched to portraiture and acquired a considerable reputation, although this success did not last. Unable to adapt to later fashionable artistic currents, his commissions declined and his work was largely forgotten after his death until the 20th century revival of interest in the conversation piece.


Biography

Arthur Devis was born in
Preston, Lancashire Preston () is a city on the north bank of the River Ribble in Lancashire, England. The city is the administrative centre of the county of Lancashire and the wider City of Preston, Lancashire, City of Preston local government district. Preston ...
, the eldest son of Anthony Devis, a carpenter and bookseller who ultimately become a
freeman Freeman, free men, Freeman's or Freemans may refer to: Places United States * Freeman, Georgia, an unincorporated community * Freeman, Illinois, an unincorporated community * Freeman, Indiana, an unincorporated community * Freeman, South Dako ...
of the town and a member of the town council. It may have been his father who was responsible for introducing Devis to the Flemish painter
Peter Tillemans Peter Tillemans ( 1684 – 5 December 1734)Noakes, Aubrey, ''Sportsmen in a Landscape'' (Ayer Publishing, 1971, )pp. 47–56: ''Peter Tillemans and Early Newmarket''at books.google.com, accessed 7 February 2009. ONDB writes: "In 1733 Tillemans re ...
, who became his teacher. During the early 1730s, Devis is known to have been an assistant in Tillemans's London studio, apparently copying views of Italy by artists such as Pannini and
Marco Ricci Marco Ricci (6 June 1676 – 21 January 1730) was an Italian Baroque painter. Early years He was born at Belluno and received his first instruction in art from his uncle, Sebastiano Ricci, likely in Milan in 1694–6.Giacometti, Margherita. In: ' ...
. Not surprisingly, the first work Devis painted on commission, a depiction of a house within its park, also shows his interest in landscape ("
Hoghton Tower Hoghton Tower is a fortified manor house east of the village of Hoghton, Lancashire, England, and stands on a hilltop site on the highest point in the area. It takes its name from the De Hoghton baronets, de Hoghton family, its historical ...
from Duxon Hill, Lancashire", see below). By 1737, however, he had become a portrait painter. In 1745 he established a studio in
Great Queen Street Great Queen Street is a street in the West End of central London in England. It is a continuation of Long Acre from Drury Lane to Kingsway. It runs from 1 to 44 along the north side, east to west, and 45 to about 80 along the south side, wes ...
, Lincoln's Inn Fields, the location of an academy of painting opened in 1711. By this time he had acquired a considerable artistic reputation. Drawing upon his father's civic position, Devis also found his clientele among the members of pro- Jacobite Lancashire families and the network of their connections. A story was handed down within his family that Devis himself so resembled the 'young pretender',
Charles Edward Stuart Charles Edward Louis John Sylvester Maria Casimir Stuart (31 December 1720 – 30 January 1788) was the elder son of James Francis Edward Stuart, making him the grandson of James VII and II, and the Stuart claimant to the thrones of England, ...
, that being taken for the prince on one occasion, he was arrested and in danger for his life. The account later made its way into the revised edition of
Matthew Pilkington Matthew Pilkington (1701–1774), Church of Ireland priest, writer, and art historian, was the author of a standard text on painters that became known as ''Pilkington's Dictionary''. His first wife was the poet and memoirist Laetitia Pilkington a ...
's ''Dictionary of Painters'' and was made a dramatic fragment by the painter's descendant, Martin Farquhar Tupper, as "a true family anecdote" in "The Pretender and his Double" (1881). Devis was a hard-working craftsman, receiving his greatest number of commissions for portraits between 1748 and 1758, after which he failed to keep abreast of later developments in the work of such artists as
Joshua Reynolds Sir Joshua Reynolds (16 July 1723 – 23 February 1792) was an English painter who specialised in portraits. The art critic John Russell (art critic), John Russell called him one of the major European painters of the 18th century, while Lucy P ...
and
Johann Zoffany Johan / Johann Joseph Zoffany (born Johannes Josephus Zaufallij; 13 March 1733 – 11 November 1810) was a German neoclassical painter who was active mainly in England, Italy, and India. His works appear in many prominent British collections ...
. As a consequence he came to be considered mannered and old-fashioned. By 1765,
Lord John Cavendish Lord John Cavendish (22 October 1732 – 18 December 1796) was a British nobleman and politician. Background Cavendish was the youngest son of William Cavendish, 3rd Duke of Devonshire, and his wife Catherine, daughter of John Hoskins. Prim ...
was commenting on a projected portrait of his nephew by Devis: "I am much afraid it will be frightful for I understand, his pictures are all of a sort; they are whole lengths of about 2 feet long & the person is always represented in a genteel attitude, either leaning against a pillar, or standing by a flower pot, or leading an Italian greyhound on a string, or in some other ingenious pose." Despite his fading reputation, in 1768 Devis became president of the newly founded
Free Society of Artists Free may refer to: Concept * Freedom, the ability to act or change without constraint or restriction * Emancipate, attaining civil and political rights or equality * Free (''gratis''), free of charge * Gratis versus libre, the difference betw ...
, where he also exhibited works from 1761 onwards, but he was never admitted to membership of the rival
Royal Academy The Royal Academy of Arts (RA) is an art institution based in Burlington House in Piccadilly London, England. Founded in 1768, it has a unique position as an independent, privately funded institution led by eminent artists and architects. Its ...
. For income he was obliged to take up restoring pictures, though this could be remunerative. As early as 1762 he was working on the ancestral portraits of his patron Sir Roger Newdigate at
Arbury Hall Arbury Hall () is a Grade I listed country house in Nuneaton, Warwickshire, England, and the ancestral home of the Newdigate family, later the Newdigate-Newdegate and Fitzroy-Newdegate ( Viscount Daventry) families. History The hall is bu ...
. And for repairing and restoring the "
Painted Hall The Old Royal Naval College are buildings that serve as the architectural centrepiece of Maritime Greenwich, a World Heritage Site in Greenwich, London, described by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) ...
" of the
Royal Naval Hospital, Greenwich Greenwich Hospital was a permanent home for retired sailors of the Royal Navy, which operated from 1692 to 1869. Its buildings, initially Greenwich Palace, in Greenwich, London, were later used by the Royal Naval College, Greenwich and the Uni ...
between 1777 and 1778, he received the fee of one thousand pounds. In 1783 Devis sold all the paintings in his possession and in 1787 died in retirement in Brighton. He was buried in the churchyard of St. Mary Paddington, London.


Work

With the 20th century revival of interest in the conversation piece, the artist was described as "the tireless Devis" according to the first survey of the genre. Later scholarship by
Ellen Gates D'Oench Ellen D'Oench ( Gates; October 2, 1930 – May 22, 2009) was Curator Emerita of the Davison Art Center at Wesleyan University, Connecticut. A Wesleyan graduate magna cum laude, she taught courses on museum studies, the history of prints, and the ...
more than doubled the number of ascriptions to him from 116 to 281 paintings. Due to his early training under Tillemans, Devis's first paintings were panoramic landscapes of stylized detail with minute figures moving about them. The view of Hoghton Tower (1735) is one such; another of the same period features Hornby Hall and Castle. This manner was easily adapted to the later background depictions of the mansions and grounds of those who commissioned from Devis the portraits of themselves and their families, as in the 1747 paintings of Atherton Hall and
Okeover Hall Okeover Hall is a privately owned Grade II* listed country house in Okeover, Staffordshire, England. It is the family seat of the Okeover family, who have been in residence since the reign of William Rufus. The house lies close to the border betw ...
below. By the 1750s the focus was more on a central figure, often leaning with elegant grace against a tree – or, in the case of Philip Howard below, seated on a chair to one side with buildings reduced to details in the distant landscape. It has been remarked that what appears in a Devis painting is often "a magical world of make-believe" which portrays its sitters and their surroundings, not as they actually were but as they aspired for them to be. Depictions of buildings by Devis cannot always be taken as proof of their actual appearance. The portrayal of Okeover Hall is one example. There were several revised sets of architect's drawings for this, and the design sent as a guide and painted by Devis is completely different from the one eventually chosen by the owner. The people grouped in the foreground, displaying all the trappings of leisure, are obviously studio portraits and Devis was not required to visit the site of the unfinished building project. If he had, he would have realised, not just that the house was being built to a different plan but that, without workmen of any sort visible, his idealised landscape hid a very different social reality than the one he was required to depict. Another example of judicious concealment is the bucolic background given "Edward Rookes-Leeds and his Family" (c.1763-8), the source of whose income was the industrial workings that occupied the bulk of his estate. Devis's impressive interiors, too, are more often imaginatively concocted out of architectural pattern books than based on reality. One exception is the neo-Gothic library at
Arbury Hall Arbury Hall () is a Grade I listed country house in Nuneaton, Warwickshire, England, and the ancestral home of the Newdigate family, later the Newdigate-Newdegate and Fitzroy-Newdegate ( Viscount Daventry) families. History The hall is bu ...
shown in Devis's portrait of Roger Newdigate (1756-8), who holds the plan for the room on his knee. On the other hand, "Breaking-up Day at John Clayton's School in Salford" (1738-40), with its confused transition from inside to outside, is pure Baroque fantasy. The actual building had no such noble stonework as shown but was of brick. Doubtless much of this was an understood convention of the conversation piece genre; but arising from it is the possibility suggested that one aspect of Devis's practice was to have paintings of figures in such interiors ready prepared in his studio and requiring only the faces to be filled in - with a sliding scale of charges for extra details such as an elaborate carpet or ceramics on a mantelpiece. It is a commonplace to describe the figures in Devis's paintings as "doll-like", and with good reason. In common with other artists of his time such as
Joshua Reynolds Sir Joshua Reynolds (16 July 1723 – 23 February 1792) was an English painter who specialised in portraits. The art critic John Russell (art critic), John Russell called him one of the major European painters of the 18th century, while Lucy P ...
and
Thomas Gainsborough Thomas Gainsborough (; 14 May 1727 (baptised) – 2 August 1788) was an English portrait and landscape painter, draughtsman, and printmaker. Along with his rival Sir Joshua Reynolds, he is considered one of the most important British artists o ...
, Devis possessed a number of articulated lay-figures which could be clothed in the latest fashions and so posed as to save his sitters the inconvenience of frequently visiting his studio. These could be arranged according to the recommendations of such books as François Nivelon's deportment manual, ''The Rudiments of Genteel Behaviour'' (1737) whose conventionality was later deplored by Lord Cavendish. Given these conventions, however, by studying Devis's paintings it was possible to decode the message about themselves that his sitters wished to convey. For example, the painting of "A Gentleman and Lady at the Harpsichord" (otherwise known as "The Duet", 1749), suggests conjugal harmony, but also the hierarchy within the marriage relationship. He hands her the music with which she will accompany his playing on the violin that lies ready on the piano. Another sign of her background role is that she sits, while he is standing nearer the window. The man's financial status is further suggested by the fact that the light source is the handsome three-sectioned
Palladian window Palladian architecture is a European architectural style derived from the work of the Republic of Venice, Venetian architect Andrea Palladio (1508–1580). What is today recognised as Palladian architecture evolved from his concepts of symmetr ...
which had only just come into fashion. A cultured and fashionable interest in music is also indicated. In other paintings, the globe in the corner of Roger Hesketh's family portrait and the apparatus on display in that of the academic John Bacon FRS (both c. 1742-3), establish that they are men of learning with scientific preoccupations.


Gallery

File:Hoghton Tower by Devis.jpg,
Hoghton Tower Hoghton Tower is a fortified manor house east of the village of Hoghton, Lancashire, England, and stands on a hilltop site on the highest point in the area. It takes its name from the De Hoghton baronets, de Hoghton family, its historical ...
in
Lancashire Lancashire ( , ; abbreviated ''Lancs'') is a ceremonial county in North West England. It is bordered by Cumbria to the north, North Yorkshire and West Yorkshire to the east, Greater Manchester and Merseyside to the south, and the Irish Sea to ...
File:Arthur Devis 14.jpg, Breaking-Up Day at Dr Clayton's School at Salford (c. 1738) File:Arthur Devis - Thomas Lister and His Family.jpg, Thomas Lister and His Family (1740-1741) File:Arthur Devis - Gentleman with a Cannon - Google Art Project.jpg, Gentleman with a Cannon (1741) File:Arthur Devis - The John Bacon Family - Google Art Project.jpg, The John Bacon Family (1742) File:Arthur Devis - William Farington of Shawe Hall, Lancashire - Google Art Project.jpg, William Farrington of Shawe Hall, Lancashire (c. 1743) File:Arthur Devis - Mr and Mrs Atherton - Google Art Project.jpg, Mr and Mrs
William Atherton William Atherton (born July 30, 1947) is an American actor. He had starring roles in ''The Sugarland Express'' (1974), '' The Day of the Locust'' (1975), '' The Hindenburg'' (1975) and '' Looking for Mr. Goodbar'' (1977), but is most recognized ...
(1744) File:Arthur Devis - Robert Gwillym of Atherton and His Family - Google Art Project.jpg, Robert Vernon Atherton Gwillym of Atherton Hall and His Family (1745-1747) File:Arthur Devis - An Unknown Man with His Daughter - Google Art Project.jpg, An Unknown Man with His Daughter (1746-1748) File:Arthur Devis - Leak Okeover, Rev. John Allen and Captain Chester at Okeover Hall, Staffordshire - Google Art Project.jpg, Leak Okeover, Rev. John Allen and Captain Chester at
Okeover Hall Okeover Hall is a privately owned Grade II* listed country house in Okeover, Staffordshire, England. It is the family seat of the Okeover family, who have been in residence since the reign of William Rufus. The house lies close to the border betw ...
, Staffordshire (1747) File:Arthur Devis 10a.jpg, Mr Peter Ducane (1747) File:Arthur Devis 10b.jpg, The Children of Mr & Mrs Peter Ducane (1747) File:Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bull by Arthur Devis, 1747.JPG, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bull (1747) File: Devis_Duet.jpg, The Duet (1749), Victoria & Albert Museum File:Arthus Devis Thomas Cave Family 1749.jpg, Thomas Cave Family (1749) File:Arthur Devis 08.JPG, A Family of Anglers (perhaps the Swaine Family of Fencroft, Cambridgeshire) (1749) File:Arthur Devis 13.jpg, The James Family (1751) File:ArthurDevisSirJoshuaFamily.jpg, Sir Joshua Vanneck, 1st Baronet and Family at
Roehampton House Roehampton House is a Grade I listed house at Roehampton Lane, Roehampton, London. What is now the central block of the current building was built between 1710 and 1712 by the architect Thomas Archer and named Roehampton House. It was built on ...
, Putney (1752) File:Arthur Devis 12.jpg, The Clavey family in their garden at Hampstead (1754) File:Sir Roger Newdigate in the Library at Arbury Arthur Devis.jpg, Sir Roger Newdigate in his Gothic Revival Library at
Arbury Hall Arbury Hall () is a Grade I listed country house in Nuneaton, Warwickshire, England, and the ancestral home of the Newdigate family, later the Newdigate-Newdegate and Fitzroy-Newdegate ( Viscount Daventry) families. History The hall is bu ...
(1756-1758) File:John Shaw, 4th Bt (1728-1799), of Eltham Lodge, by Arthur Devis.jpg, John Shaw, 4th Bt (1728-1799), of Eltham Lodge (1757) File:Arthur Holdsworth Conversing with Thomas Taylor and Captain Stancombe by the River Dart G-002062.jpg, Arthur Holdsworth Conversing with Thomas Taylor and Captain Stancombe by the River Dart (1757) File:Arthur Devis 11.jpg, Philip Howard of
Corby Castle Corby Castle is a Grade I listed building and ancestral home of a cadet branch of the prominent Howard family situated on the southern edge of the village of Great Corby in northern Cumbria, England. History It was originally built in the 13th ...
, Cumberland (1759) File:Sir John van Hatten by Arthur Devis.jpg, Sir John van Hatten (c. 1760-1761) File:Robert Manners-Sutton (1722-1772) by Arthur Devis.jpg,
Lord Robert Manners-Sutton Lord Robert Manners-Sutton (born Robert Manners; 21 February 1722 – 19 November 1762) was a British Army officer, courtier and politician. He was the second son of John Manners, 3rd Duke of Rutland by his wife the Hon. Bridget Sutton, and you ...
(1722-1762) File:'Portrait of Jonas Hanway, Seated at a Table beside a Surveyor's Theodolite and a Classical Urn, Overlooking a Landscape' by Arthur Devis.jpg,
Jonas Hanway Jonas Hanway Royal Society of Arts, FRSA (12 August 1712 – 5 September 1786), was a British philanthropist, polemicist, merchant and Explorer, traveller. He was the first male Londoner to carry an umbrella and was a noted opponent of tea drinki ...


Family

Devis married Elizabeth Faulkner (1719–1788) at
St Katharine's by the Tower The Royal Foundation of St Katharine is a religious charity based in the East End of London. The Foundation traces its origins back to the medieval church and monastic hospital St Katharine's by the Tower (full name ''Royal Hospital and Collegia ...
, London, on 20 July 1742. Of the marriage were born twenty-two children, only six of whom survived past infancy. Two sons, Thomas Anthony Devis (1757–1810) and his younger brother, Arthur William Devis, became painters. One daughter, Ellin Devis, was a schoolmistress and author of the popular grammar ''The Accidence'' (1775). Devis's half-brother
Anthony Devis Anthony Devis (18 March 1729 – 26 April 1816) was an English Landscape art, landscape painter, working especially in watercolor and oils and active in London.Waterhouse, E., ''Dictionary of British 18th century painters'', 1981, p. 108 Anthon ...
also was a painter, as was a son-in-law, Robert Marris, who as a young man had lived and travelled with
Anthony Devis Anthony Devis (18 March 1729 – 26 April 1816) was an English Landscape art, landscape painter, working especially in watercolor and oils and active in London.Waterhouse, E., ''Dictionary of British 18th century painters'', 1981, p. 108 Anthon ...
and later married Arthur Devis's daughter Frances. In his turn, Marris had for pupil
Richard Corbould Richard Corbould (18 April 1757 – 17 July 1831) was an English artist. He was a painter, in oil and watercolour, of portraits, landscape, and occasionally history; of porcelain, and miniatures on ivory, and enamels; and was furthermore an imp ...
, who painted miniatures of Devis and his wife for the model tomb commissioned after their deaths by their daughter Ellin. The family's creative dynasty was also to continue into the following century. For example, the physician Martin Tupper married Robert Marris's only daughter, Ellin Devis Marris, and their eldest son, the poet and writer Martin Farquhar Tupper, married his cousin Isabella Devis, daughter of Arthur William Devis. The daughters of this marriage went on to publish ''Poems by Three Sisters'' in 1864, while one of them, Ellin Isabelle, left a biographical account of the family at the end of the century.Sydney H. Pavière, "Biographical notes on the Devis family of painters", ''The Volume of the Walpole Society''
vol. 25 (1936-1937), pp. 115-166
/ref>


Sources

* Belsey, Hugh. "Devis" in ''Oxford Art Online'' (updated 04/07/04) * * * Pavière, Sydney Herbert, ''The Devis Family of Painters'', Lewis, Leigh-on-Sea 1950 * ''Polite Society by Arthur Devis'', Harris Museum and Art Gallery, Preston, Exh. cat., 1983 *


References


External links

*


Paintings by Devis 'and his circle' sold at auction

Devis's ''Mr and Mrs Atherton'' (c1743)
at the
Walker Art Gallery The Walker Art Gallery is an art gallery in Liverpool, which houses one of the largest art collections in England outside London. It is part of the National Museums Liverpool group. History The Walker Art Gallery's collection dates from 1819 ...
{{DEFAULTSORT:Devis, Arthur 1712 births 1787 deaths 18th-century English painters 18th-century English male artists English male painters Artists from Preston, Lancashire English portrait painters