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George Talbot

Image credit: National Trust Images

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Notes

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An inscription on this painting identifies the sitter as George Talbot and states that he was 'killed in battle'. If this can be relied upon, the sitter is probably George Talbot of Rudge, Shropshire (third son of Sharington Talbot I and his second wife Mary Washbourne). His daughter was Sarah, who married Clement Clerke (third son of George Clerke of Willoughby, Warwickshire), who was created a baronet after the Restoration. Clement Clerke was an entrepreneur whose greatest achievement was the application of the reverberatory furnace (cupola) to smelting lead and copper, and to remelting pig iron for foundry purposes.

This work is close in both demeanour and execution to John Michael Wright's portrait of Dryden (in the National Portrait Gallery), which shares the same fall of shadow and use of white highlighting on the face.

National Trust, Lacock Abbey, Fox Talbot Museum and Village

near Chippenham

Title

George Talbot

Medium

oil on canvas

Measurements

H 66.5 x W 60.5 cm

Accession number

996309

Acquisition method

gift from Matilda Theresa Talbot (formerly Gilchrist-Clark), 1948

Work type

Painting

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National Trust, Lacock Abbey, Fox Talbot Museum and Village

Lacock, near Chippenham, Wiltshire SN15 2PG England

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