Collection Online
Sir Sampson Gideon and an unidentified companion

Sir Sampson Gideon and an unidentified companion
1767

Medium
oil on canvas
Measurements
275.6 × 189.0 cm
Inscription
inscribed in brown and white paint c.l.: POMPEO BATONI / PINXIT ROMÆ / AN. 1767.
inscribed in brown paint (diagonally) c.r.: To / Sr (r underlined) Sampson Gideon Bart / Roma
Accession Number
1325-5
Department
International Painting
Credit Line
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Everard Studley Miller Bequest, 1963
This digital record has been made available on NGV Collection Online through the generous support of Digitisation Champion Ms Carol Grigor through Metal Manufactures Limited
Gallery location
Not on display
About this work

This painting is a document of the Grand Tour (the traditional visit to Europe undertaken by Britain’s upper classes), and is one of Pompeo Batoni’s finest portraits of an English visitor to Rome. The seated figure is Sir Sampson Gideon (1745–1824), the son of a wealthy financier of Portuguese origin. Although Sir Sampson visited Rome in 1766, the evidence suggests that this picture, dated 1767, was completed after his return to England. He is depicted showing a portrait miniature to his companion. It can be presumed that the miniature represents Sir Sampson’s wife, Maria, whom he married in December 1766.

Subjects (general)
Human Figures Portraits
Subjects (specific)
aristocrats breeches (trousers) busts (sculpture) dog (species) grand tours men (male humans) menswear miniatures (paintings)