Details
JOSEPH WRIGHT OF DERBY, A.R.A. (DERBY 1734-1797)
Portrait of Richard Ellison (1722-1797), three-quarter-length, in a claret coat; and Portrait of Esther Ellison, née Walker (1726-1813), three-quarter-length, in a blue dress
oil on canvas
5012 x 4014 in. (128.1 x 102.2 cm.)
the first inscribed 'Richard Ellison / -of- / Sudbrooke Holme/ born.1722.- died 1797.' (upper right); the second inscribed 'Esther, Wife of Richard Ellison. / Dau:& Co-heiress of / Henry Walker of Whitby. / born, 1726.- died, 1813.' (upper right)

a pair
Provenance
Commissioned from the artist by the sitters, listed in the artist's Account Book among sitters of circa 1760 at £12.12, and by descent to their daughter,
Susanna Ellison, wife of Colonel Humphrey Waldo Sibthorp (1744-1815), Canwick Hall, Lincolnshire, and by descent to their son,
Charles de Laet Waldo Sibthorp (1783-1855), and by descent to his son,
Coningsby Charles Sibthorpe (1846-1932), Canwick Hall, Lincolnshire.
A private members' club, London.
Anonymous sale; Bonhams, London, 21 October 2021, lot 79, as 'Follower of Thomas Hudson'.
Literature
B. Nicholson, Joseph Wright of Derby: Painter of Light, London, 1968, I, p. 196.
Special notice
This lot is offered without reserve.
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Lot Essay

The Ellisons were a prominent Lincoln family, whose experiences reflect the challenges faced in the quickly changing social and economic world of the seventeenth century. Richard's father, also Richard, had paved the way his family's to prosperity by leasing parts of the canal system that gave access to central England and the North Sea, profiting from the transport of hay, grain, wool and timber. His son, the sitter in the present portrait, continued to run and maintain the navigation channel but also branched out into banking. In 1775, in partnership with Abel Smith of Nottingham, and John Brown, a Lincoln alderman, he established the first bank in Lincoln. This bank, after two mergers, became the National Provincial Bank in 1918, and is now the National Westminster Bank, known by its common name NatWest.
Richard's wife, Esther, was the grand-daughter of wealthy ship owner, Captain John Walker of Whitby, to whom the explorer Captain James Cook was apprenticed in 1746. The couple had six children: Richard (b.1754), Henry (b.1761), John; Anne; Susanna and Harriet. Together they purchased the estate of Sudbrooke Holme in 1759; it is likely to adorn the walls of their new home that the present portraits were commissioned from the youthful Wright.

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