SMIBERT, JOHN, an
eminent artist, whose works are described as having had a powerful and
lasting influence on the arts of design in America, was born in the
Grassmarket, Edinburgh, about 1684. His father was a dyer. He served his
apprenticeship to a house-painter in his native city; but, anxious to
raise himself above that humble occupation, he repaired to London,
where, for subsistence, he was at first obliged to work for
coach-painters. He was subsequently employed in copying pictures for
dealers, and obtained admittance into the academy. After pursuing his
studies there for some time, he found means to visit Italy, where he
spent three years in copying Raphael, Titian, Vandyck, and Reubens, and
became the fellow-traveller of the celebrated Dean Berkeley, afterwards
bishop of Cloyne, in Ireland. While at Florence he was engaged by the
grand duke of Tuscany to paint two or three Siberian Tartars presented
to his highness by the Czar of Russia. On his return to England his
improvement was so great that he soon obtained a large share of
business.
In 1728, when his friend
Dr. Berkeley went to America to found a university in the Island of
Bermuda, for the conversion of the American savages to Christianity, he
took Smibert with him as professor of drawing, painting, and
architecture, in his intended institution; and with this learned and
philanthropic individual he resided for two years at Newport, Rhode
Island. A large painting by Smibert, representing Berkeley and some of
his family, with the artist himself, on their first landing in America,
is shown at Yale College, being, it is believed, the first picture of
more than a single figure ever painted in the United States.
Being disappointed in
obtaining assistance from England, Berkeley abandoned his project of a
university, and after his return to Britain Smibert settled at Boston in
New England, where he married a daughter of Dr. Williams, the Latin
school-master of that town, by whom he had two children. He acquired
considerable fortune and a high reputation by his art, and died there in
1751. His son, Nathaniel, who died young, was also an artist of much
promise. Some account of Smibert, who was an acquaintance and
correspondent of Allan Ramsay, will be found in Walpole’s ‘Anecdotes of
Painting,’ and in Dunlap’s valuable ‘History of the Rise and Progress of
the Arts of Design in the United States.’ |