Drawing from life at the Royal Academy from The Microcosm of London (1808-10) |
Joshua Reynolds was appointed the first President of the Royal Academy and gave his inaugural speech on 2 January 1769.
Royal Academy Schools
The Royal Academy was the first body to provide professional art training in Britain, where artists could come and learn from the best in their profession. In its first year, over 70 students were enrolled. Its famous pupils included J. M. W. Turner, John Soane, Thomas Rowlandson, William Blake, Thomas Lawrence, John Constable, George Hayter and David Wilkie.
The annual exhibition
The first Royal Academy exhibition ran from 25 April to 27 May 1769 with a display of over 130 works of art. George III visited the exhibition on 25 May. There has been a summer exhibition of the Royal Academy every year since.
The exhibition at the Royal Academy, Somerset House from The Microcosm of London (1808-10) |
Where did they meet?
The Royal Academy initially met in Pall Mall, but moved to part of Old Somerset House in 1771 and then to New Somerset House in 1780, a building which had been designed by William Chambers, one of the founding members and the Academy’s first treasurer.
Somerset House from London in the 19th century by TH Shepherd (1829) |
Burlington House, Piccadilly |
1768-1792 Sir Joshua Reynolds
1792-1805 Benjamin West
1805-1806 James Wyatt
1806-1820 Benjamin West
1820-1830 Sir Thomas Lawrence
1830-1850 Sir Martin Archer Shee
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Sources used include:
Ackermann, Rudolph, and Pyne, William Henry, The Microcosm of London or London in miniature Volume 1 (Rudolph Ackermann 1808-1810, reprinted 1904)
Leslie, Charles Robert, RA, and Taylor, Tom, MA, Life and Times of Sir Joshua Reynolds (1865)
Postle, Martin, Reynolds, Sir Joshua (1723-1792) Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn Oct 2009, accessed 2 Jul 2013)
Shepherd, Thomas H, London in the Nineteenth Century, illustrated by a series of views (1829)
Royal Academy website
All photographs © RegencyHistory.net
I have been studying Mary Moser, on of the two women allowed to be members in the first lot. She had an affair with Richard Cosway, a miniature painter. Richard's wife was really interesting and although a devote Catholic, had an affair with Thomas Jefferson, whose wife died early in life. All these connections are fascinating to me in the same way the noble folks married their cousins.
ReplyDeleteI find it interesting that the founder members included two women. I know little about her, but it sounds like Mary Moser had a colourful life! I do not find it so odd that the nobility sometimes married their cousins because it happened several times in my family tree and they were definitely not nobility!
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