Frederic Leighton 1830-1896
Framed: 39.5 x 35cm.; 15½ x 13¾ in.
Stripped of superfluous detail, Lady in Profile is an exercise in formal arrangement and feminine beauty on their own terms – an aesthetic approach that defined Leighton’s celebrated career. The profile of the sitter, one of quiet reverie, also recalls Roman imperial coinage; yet Leighton reinterprets ancient conventions through a distinctly modern lens.
With remarkable subtlety and technical proficiency, the model’s luminous flesh tones emerge from the enveloping darkness through delicate gradations, creating a sculptural presence that showcases Leighton’s Continental training from Frankfurt to Paris. The background’s velvety opacity functions not as negative space but as an active part of the composition, generating dramatic tension between illumination and shadow, reminiscent of Ingres’ psychological depth while maintaining distinctly British restraint.
The sitter’s elaborately styled coiffure is masterfully rendered, with golden strands carefully defined yet smoothly blending into a larger architectural form. The delicate, white garment, crafted with surprisingly liberal brushwork, offers a textural contrast to the hair’s structured complexity and the skin’s porcelain smoothness.
Through this modest yet profound portrait, Leighton realises the Aesthetic Movement’s ultimate aspiration: art liberated from narrative obligation towards pure formal beauty. It is a timeless work that represents Victorian portraiture’s most sophisticated engagement with tradition whilst pioneering modernist aesthetic independence.
Provenance
Sotheby’s, London, 26 November 1986, lot 39
Thomas Agnew & Sons Ltd, London
Private Collection