Portrait of John Kay of Bury (1704-1762)

Made:
1750-1759 in United Kingdom
artist:
Unattributed
Painting

Creative Commons LicenseThis image is released under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 Licence

Buy this image as a print 

Buy

License this image for commercial use at Science and Society Picture Library

License

Painting
Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Portrait of John Kay of Bury (1704-1762), unattributed, 1750s. Oil on canvas in an oval in gilt frame. Kay appears head and shoulders, slightly to the right, facing front, wearing a tricorn hat, curly wig and open jacket. Light brown background.

This portrait formed part of the Bennet Woodcroft Bequest, which was among the founding collections of the Science Museum. Woodcroft had developed a 'National Gallery of Portraits of Inventors, Discoverers and Introducers of the Useful Arts’ combining gifts, loans and purchases of portraits, while acting as the first curator of the Patent Museum.

This original portrait of John Kay was formerly the property of the late Lieut. Col. Sutcliffe, great-grandson of Kay, who had deposited it in the Royal Polytechnic Institution. At the break-up of the Institution, it passed to Bennet Woodcroft. It is listed as item 24 in his Gallery of Portraits.

An engraving of this portrait was made by Thomas Oldham Barlow and included in the Portfolio of 'Portraits of Inventors of Machines for the Manufacture of Textile Fabrics with Memoirs' published by Thomas Agnew & Sons with an introduction by Woodcroft in 1863 (see 1980-840). Text under the print lists the portrait as 'from the original picture left by the late Lieut. Col. Sutcliffe' in Woodcroft's collection.

Details

Category:
Art
Object Number:
1903-232
Materials:
paint and textile
Measurements:
overall: 450 mm x 370 mm x 50 mm,
frame [oval]: 410 mm x 365 mm x 45 mm,
image [sight]: 285 mm x 245 mm
type:
oil painting and portrait
credit:
Woodcroft Collection