Late 17th-Century English School, Portrait Of Robert Bedford, Yorkshire

Late 17th-Century English School, Portrait Of Robert Bedford, Yorkshire

Brand: Brave Fine Art
3153.00 USD In stock Buy at Merchant

This late 17th-century English oil painting depicts Robert Bedford of Crow Nest, Dewsbury, Yorkshire, a man who appears to embody a fascinating moment in English social history - when inherited land, provincial gentility, and expanding commerce began quietly to overlap. Painted around 1695, when Bedford was likely in early middle age, the work presents him as a thoughtful, self-made provincial gentleman navigating a changing world. In this quiet portrayal, the artist has focused almost entirely upon Bedford himself, the pale intelligence of the face and the heavy dark curls of the fashionable periwig falling around his shoulders. His lace cravat, delicately rendered in soft whites and silvers, signals refinement, yet, importantly, the portrait avoids excess. One senses a man not consumed by vanity. The surviving archival records suggest a figure actively involved in estate management. By the early 18th century, Bedford was living in Leeds and described as a salter - e.g. a merchant operating within the vital commercial networks of northern England. Salt, indispensable to preservation, underpinned much of daily economic life. Our sitter, therefore, belonged to that increasingly important class of provincial men whose wealth and identity were shaped through enterprise. It's tempting to imagine the world he inhabited. Yorkshire in the decades after the Restoration was a place of gradual transformation. Roads improved, markets expanded, and towns such as Leeds were growing rapidly through trade and manufacture. Yet much of life still retained an older rhythm. Crow Nest itself would likely have been a modest but substantial vernacular building. It was described as an "exceedingly pleasant house" and "fit for a Gentleman’s family", complete with gardens, orchards and pasture. It left the family in 1733. Bedford’s days were probably divided between estate concerns, pawing over legal documents, travelling between market centres, and negotiations. Although the artist is unknown, it's evidently executed by a capable provincial painter, likely working within the broader influence of Sir Godfrey Kneller. The handling of the face is psychologically attentive, while the costume and wig are rendered convincingly. The dark oval surround enhances the sense of introspection, drawing the viewer inward. More than three centuries after its inception, the portrait survives today as the trace of a particular human presence - a Yorkshire gentleman standing at the threshold of modern Britain, shaped by land, commerce, ambition, and inheritance. Held in a simple later ebonised frame with a gilt slip. Medium: Oil on canvas Overall size: 28” x 32½” / 71cm x 82cm Year of creation: c. 1695 Labels & Inscriptions: Labelled on the reverse 'Judge Bedford, High Court'. Provenance: Private collection, UK. Condition: Cleaned. Revarnished. Frame in good condition with minor age-related wear. Our reference: BRV2304

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