Francis Hayman (Exeter c.1708-1776 London)
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Francis Hayman (Exeter c.1708-1776 London)

A scene from The Tempest by William Shakespeare

Details
Francis Hayman (Exeter c.1708-1776 London)
A scene from The Tempest by William Shakespeare
oil on canvas, laid down on board, unframed
9 3/8 x 34¾ in. (23.5 x 88.5 cm.)
Provenance
Probably James Ralph; Langford's, 21 April 1782, lot 45, as Prospero and Miranda. A Sketch for the Picture at Vauxhall.
Literature
B. Allen, Francis Hayman, New Haven and London, 1987, p.178, probably no.135.
Special notice
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Lot Essay

Brian Allen, in his Checklist of Paintings (op.cit, p. 178, nos. 134-5), lists two 'Scenes from The Tempest', datable to c.1745. The present picture is believed to be a preparatory version for the larger upright composition which would have hung in the Loggia of the Prince of Wales' pavillion at Vauxhall Gardens. The latter was painted for Jonathan Tyers, the proprietor of Vauxhall, and was probably the picture included in his posthumous sale in these Rooms on 28 April 1830, lot 28, together with a scene from As You Like It - believed to be 'The Wrestling Scene', now in Tate Britain, London.
Francis Hayman was one of the most respected artists of his own day and a central figure in the mid-18th Century art world in London. He initially trained as a scene painter, and counted the great actor David Garrick among his friends. In 1745, around the date of the present work, he portrayed Garrick in a double portrait with William Windham of Felbrigg (B. Allen, op.cit., p. 91, no. 10).

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