Saint George Slaying the Dragon Signed and dated 1787
Oil on canvas | 196.6 x 219.8 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external) | RCIN 406165
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West’s arrival in England from Italy in 1763 occurred at a time when artists were seeking to create a distinguished national school of history painting. George III was eager to support such a goal and was also a keen supporter of the proposal to found a national academy for the teaching and display of arts: his patronage of West and the foundation of the Royal Academy in 1768 were closely intertwined. At the King’s instruction, ‘The Departure of Regulus’ (OM 1152, 405614) was shown at the first Royal Academy exhibition in 1769; he succeeded Sir Joshua Reynolds as President of the Royal Academy in 1792.
West painted around sixty pictures for George III between 1768 and 1801. From 1772 he was described in Royal Academy catalogues as ‘Historical Painter to the King’ and from 1780 he received an annual stipend from the King of £100. In the 1780s he gave drawing lessons to the Princesses and in 1791 he succeeded Richard Dalton as Surveyor of the King’s Pictures.
In 1787-9 Benjamin West executed a series of eight paintings for George III to hang in the King’s Audience Chamber at Windsor Castle; these are still in the collection (OM 1151, 406165, OM 1158-64, 404925-7 and 407521-3) along with two oil sketches for one of the series (OM 1165-6, 406461 and 402430). George III’s intention was that the room should become a ‘Garter Throne Room’; indeed the present Garter Throne Room occupies most of the original space of the room, along with the narrow Ante Throne Room. The eight subjects deal with the foundation of the Order of the Garter on 23 April 1348; the patron saint of the Order, St George; and events of the late 1340s (the time of the order’s foundation), which demonstrate the heroism, magnanimity and chivalry of the order’s founder, Edward III, his son, the Black Prince, and his wife, Queen Philippa.
Part of the arrangement of paintings in the room can be seen in Charles Wild’s watercolour (922109) and suggest that opposite the windows there was an over-mantle (this painting appearing very clearly) and three huge pictures (OM 1162-4, 407521-3); while four smaller works (OM 1158-61, 404566, 404925-7) were double-stacked on the other two walls.
West painted this work in 1787 for 600 guineas; the Saint, mounted on a white charger, wearing armour and with a red cloak flying out behind him, is about to plung a spear into the dragon, lower right; the princess kneels before them, her arms held up in fear, looking to the Saint.
The painting appears in Pyne's illustrated 'Royal Residences' of 1819, hanging in the King's Audience Chamber at Windsor Castle (RCIN 922109).Provenance
Painted for George III for the King's Audience Chamber at Windsor Castle, where it appears in Pyne's illustrated Royal Residences of 1819 (RCIN 922109).
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Medium and techniques
Oil on canvas
Measurements
196.6 x 219.8 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external)
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