~ Portrait Of An Edwardian Lady By Lionel Percy Smythe, RA RWS RI ROI ~


A fine watercolour portrait of a Edwardian Lady, dated 1918, by the artist Lionel Smythe. Presented in its original gilt, decorative frame, the picture is signed on the bottom right hand corner.


LIONEL PERCY SMYTHE:


Lionel Percy Smythe, RA RWS RI ROI, was the son of Percy Clinton Sydney Smythe, 6th Viscount Strangford and Katherine Benham. He was born in London on 4 September 1839 and spent his early years in France, where his younger sister and brother were born. The family returned to London in 1843 and lived in Gloucester Crescent, Camden). Smythe was educated at King’s College School. He was also partly educated in France and spent holidays there at Wimereux in Normandy with his stepfather William Morrison Wyllie and family. He trained in art at the Heatherley School of Fine Art. He was half brother of the artists William Lionel Wyllie and Charles William Wyllie.

Smythe exhibited at the Royal Academy from 1863 (becoming a member in 1911) and the Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolours from 1881 (becoming a member in 1880) – he eventually transferred his allegiance to the Royal Watercolour Society in 1892, becoming a member in 1894. Smythe painted rural landscapes, genre and maritime scenes, people and animals in both oils and watercolours, and became associated with a group of artists called the “Idyllists”.


Smythe and his wife Alice made frequent trips to France and eventually settled in Normandy in 1879, in an old Napoleonic fortress on the coast at Wimereux – until the building was inundated by the sea. Subsequently they moved, in 1882, to the Château d’Honvault on a hill between Wimereux and Boulogne. The couple had three children. Smythe lived and worked here until his death in 1918, the countryside and rural life of the area becoming the main inspiration for his art.


~ Dimensions ~


The frame has a width of 14.6 inches (37.75cm), a height of 16 inches (40.75cm) and a depth of 2 inches (5cm).


The painting has a width of inches (4.8cm) and a height of inches (5cm).


~ Condition ~


The watercolour is in fine condition. The frame is slightly loose and has some chipping and wear.