Gainsborough’s famous The Blue Boy painting will come back to its homeland

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There was an outcry when it was sold to an overseas buyer in 1922. Now Thomas Gainsborough’s The Blue Boy will finally return to its homeland 100 years since it was last seen in the UK.

The oil on canvas will go on display at the National Gallery from January 25 next year, marking an ‘unprecedented’ four-month loan from a gallery in the US.

The portrait, which shows a boy in a blue jacket and pantaloons, was originally unveiled at the Royal Academy in 1770. However, it has been on display at The Huntington in California for the past century after it was sold to the museum’s founder, a railroad tycoon.

The picture has remained influential with references in films such as Quentin Tarantino’s Oscar winner Django Unchained.

Dr Gabriele Finaldi, Director of the National Gallery, described the portrait as a ‘masterpiece of British art’ and said its return to the London gallery is ‘truly exceptional’ and a ‘unique opportunity for visitors to see Gainsborough at his dazzling best’.

Gainsborough’s famous The Blue Boy painting will come back to its homeland

The oil on canvas (pictured) will go on display at the National Gallery from January 25 next year, marking an ‘unprecedented’ four-month loan from a gallery in the US

He added: ‘Rich in historical resonances, a painting of supreme poise and elegance, The Blue Boy is without doubt a masterpiece of British art.’

Karen R. Lawrence, Huntington president, said: ‘This masterpiece has made an indelible mark on both art history and popular culture, capturing the imaginations of a wide range of audiences.

‘Given The Blue Boy’s iconic status at The Huntington, this is an unprecedented loan, one which we considered very carefully.

‘We hope that this partnership with the National Gallery will spark new conversations, appreciation and research on both sides of the Atlantic.’

The Blue Boy will be part of a free exhibition in Room 46 which will also include a ‘select group of paintings that demonstrate the profound influence of Van Dyck on Gainsborough’s practice and identity’.

Its positioning in the gallery will be apt because Gainsborough is said to have been largely inspired by Flemish artist Sir Anthony Van Dyck, and painted The Blue Boy to show off his technical prowess at the Royal Academy exhibition of 1770, where it was to be displayed next to his rivals under the name A Portrait of a Young Gentleman.

By 1798 it was known at The Blue Boy. 

Gainsborough painted it in defiance of his rival Sir Joshua Reynolds’s belief cool colours could only be used to support warm colours.

Sir Joshua had said: ‘It ought, in my opinion, to be indispensably observed, that the masses of light in a picture be always of a warm, mellow colour, yellow, red, or a yellowish white, and that the blue, the grey, or the green colours be kept almost entirely out of these masses, and be used only to support or set off these warm colours; and for this purpose, a small proportion of cold colour will be sufficient.’

The identity of the boy has been under question for centuries, but art historians believe it is Jonathan Buttall, the young son of a wealthy hardware merchant who befriended Gainsborough. 

In 1939, an X-ray of the painting revealed the canvas once held an unfinished depiction of an older man. In 1995 another X-ray found the boy had once been joined by a small dog, which was later covered up by a pile of rocks.     

There was national outcry in Britain when the painting was sold to US railway baron Henry Edwards Huntington in 1922, with many believing a national treasure has been lost.

He paid $778,000, or about $9.29million (£6.7million) today, making it the most expensive artwork that had ever been sold at the time.

Some 90,000 art lovers bid farewell to the painting in the final three weeks of its public display in London, and the then-National director Charles Holmes wrote ‘Au revoir’ on the back in the hope it would one day return. 

Not everyone was sad to see the painting leave Britain, however, with a reporter in the Manchester Guardian claiming ‘it would be a splendid thing if The Blue Boy were to pass into the French national collection,’ because ‘there is very little sign of any interest in France in English art’. 

The painting has never before been loaned for display outside of its US museum and is unlikely ever to be loaned again. 

The National Gallery threw open its doors to visitors in May after 152 days of closure, with strict Covid guidelines in place to allow a safe return.

Henry Edwards Huntington: Who was the rail baron who took The Blue Boy away from Britain? 

When Henry Edwards Huntington paid $778,000 to take The Blue Boy over to the US there was national outcry in Britain.

The nephew of the railroad magnate Collis P. Huntington inherited his millions from his uncle and held important executive positions with several railroads.  

He also went on to marry his uncle’s widow Arabella Huntington – who was the force behind the Huntington art collection in California – in 1913 in a union that shocked high society despite the couple being similar in age.

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In 1910 Huntington divorced his first wife Mary Alice Prentice Huntington, with whom he had four children: Howard Edward, Clara Leonora, Elizabeth Vincent, and Marian Prentice. 

Mary died three years later in 1913. She was the birth sister of Clara Elizabeth Prentice-Huntington, who had been adopted by Uncle Collis and his first wife Elizabeth. 

Henry Edwards Huntington (pictured) inherited his millions from his uncle and held important executive positions with several railroads

Henry Edwards Huntington (pictured) inherited his millions from his uncle and held important executive positions with several railroads

Mr Huntington was a fan of book collecting, which he began in 1903 at the age of 53. 

He became the centre of the electric railway system in Los Angeles, buying the narrow gauge city-oriented Los Angeles Railway, known as the ‘Yellow Car’ system, in 1898.

In 1901, Huntington formed the Pacific Electric Railway, known as the ‘Red Car’ system, which was centred at 6th and Main streets in Los Angeles.  

This was in the period of a boom in Southern California land development, with housing built in places including a Huntington-sponsored site at Orange County’s Huntington Beach. 

Huntington (centre) with railroad engineer George Clinton Ward (Left) And banker Edward Warren Rollins near Big Creek, California, April 7, 1914

Huntington (centre) with railroad engineer George Clinton Ward (Left) And banker Edward Warren Rollins near Big Creek, California, April 7, 1914

These streetcars served passenger needs that the railroads had not considered and made Mr Huntington a great deal more money.

Mr Huntington retired from business in 1916. He bought The Blue Boy, likely on the advice of his wife, in 1922, and died in 1927 while undergoing surgery. 

He and Arabella are buried, with a large monument, in the Gardens of the Huntington Library in San Marino, California.   

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