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Single Owner House Sale Lot 516

SPOILUM (FL 1785-1805) PORTRAIT CAPTAIN GEORGE DELANOE

SPOILUM (FL 1785-1805) PORTRAIT CAPTAIN GEORGE DELANOE, RN head and shoulders, in blue coat with gilt buttons, inscribed and dated verso Geo. Augustus Delanoe Capt. Royal Navy 1794, with inscription recto Captain Geo. Delanoe RN 1794 and further inscribed above opposite shoulder in another hand 'Lost his leg by a 32lb shot at the Mutiny of the Nore on June 10 1797 when in command of his Majesty's Ship Repulse 64 guns', oil on prepared cloth, oval, 41.5 x 33.5cmProvenance: By descent in the family of the sitter's mother to George Harnage of Cambridge. Sold with his faded and largely illegible handwritten 1p history of the events and a transcription.The present beautifully preserved portrait by the Chinese artist always known in the West as 'Spoilum' has all the hallmarks associated with his remarkable portraiture, mannerisms and technique. It is directly comparable to other bust length portraits of British and American merchants, captains and members of the HEIC. The support is the same "cheesecloth-like canvas mounted on laminated wood stretchers" (Crossman, plt 10, right) and the original gilt frame matches that of Spoilum's portraits of two unidentified men (Crossman, plt 5 and plt 10, left).Captain George Augustus Delanoe, RN (1762-1802) was the son of John Delanoe of Guernsey and Dorothy Harnage (1726-1807, married 1758), 1st Lieutenant and Commander of HMS "Repulse" a third rate ship of the line of sixty four guns. During the Mutiny at the Nore on June 10th 1797, Delanoe lost a leg by a shot fired from another vessel whilst escaping from the mutineers. He was awarded a pension and later promoted to Captain although he did not live long enough to assume the rank. Delanoe was buried at Lynsted, Kent. He was unmarried.(References are to C L Crossman, The Decorative Arts of the China Trade, Woodbridge 1991, Chapter 1).

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