Exhibition of 1761
The Exhibition of 1761 was the inaugural art exhibition staged by the Society of Artists of Great Britain, a group of painters, architects and sculptors. The exhibition opened on 9 May 1761 and was held at Spring Gardens in Westminster, London.
Background
The previous year the First Exhibition of contemporary art was staged in London. Organised by the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce, it had been regarded as a success. However, there were objections to the management by William Shipley. Disputes amongst the participants saw the artists split into two factions. A large body of leading artists left to form their own organisation, the Society of Artists of Great Britain.Two prominent members of the Society of Artists the painter Joshua Reynolds and architect James Paine sought out a new exhibition space, which they found at Spring Gardens close to the Strand. To suggest continuity with the previous year, it was referred to as the Second Exhibition. The rival Free Society of Artists also held their own exhibition.
Exhibition
The exhibition featured works from leading British painters including William Hogarth, Francis Hayman, Richard Wilson, Thomas Gainsborough, Joshua Reynolds and the sculptor Joseph Nollekens. Catherine Read was a notable female exhibitor.Alongside a portrait of the Irish writer Laurence Sterne, Reynolds displayed his Portrait of Robert Orme, a military-themed painting he had produced several years earlier. He also submitted a full-length equestrian portrait of Lord Ligonier, for which he may have received assistance from George Stubbs. Stubbs also submitted a painting A Stallion Called Romulus. Hogarth exhibited eight works; notable amongst them was Sigismunda Mourning over the Heart of Guiscardo, based on Boccaccio's Decameron. Although he had high hopes for the work, it received widespread ridicule. By 20 May he had withdrawn the painting and replaced it with Chairing the Member.
Gainsborough, then based in Bath and establishing himself as a fashionable portrait artist, sent a painting of the Irish politician Lord Nugent. Andrea Casali exhibited a now-lost history painting featuring King Edgar and Alfrida.
The Exhibition took place during the Seven Years' War and the Society attempted to associate itself with patriotic themes. For the one shilling exhibition catalogue Hogarth designed a frontispiece featuring the young George III and Britannia, with a preface by Samuel Johnson. Later, during the Coronation of George III in September 1761, the Society illuminated the building in Spring Gardens with images associating the new monarch with Britain's naval victories and artistic success.