Portrait of Lord Grantham
(5000-1004)

Thomas Robinson, the third Baron Grantham and later Earl de Grey, was thirty-five when Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres drew this refined portrait. Ingres chose a pose that combined the informality of youth and the self-assurance of his subject's aristocratic origins. Grantham, who commissioned this portrait himself, stands confidently against a distant view of , an important site for Grand Tourists and one that Ingres often included in portraits. Ingres made this drawing when he was a struggling young artist living in Rome, earning his living by drawing portraits of wealthy visitors to the city.

Graphite (1816)

by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (French, 1780-1867)


Art-Print Options

Unframed Archival Paper
18"x24" (46cm x 61cm) Paper $59.99
24"x36" (61cm x 92cm) Paper $89.00
32"x44" (81cm x 112cm) Paper $149.99
Self Adhesive Wall Mural
31" x 42" (78 x 107cm) Mural $139.00

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