Pinkie by Thomas Lawrence, a delicate portrait of eleven-year old Sarah Barrett Moulton and
Blue Boy by Thomas Gainsborough, a portrait of a young man believed to be Jonathan Buttall, the son of a wealthy hardware merchant, were purchased by American railway pioneer Henry Edwards Huntington and displayed opposite each other in his private collection at, what is now, The Huntington Library in San Marino, California.
Since their chance pairing in the early 1920s, many gallery visitors have mistakenly attributed the two painting to the same artist. In reality,
Blue Boy depicts a young man in period costume from one hundred and fifty years earlier and
Pinkie is a contemporary painting (for 1794) of a young girl dressed appropriately for the late eighteenth century. In addition, the paintings were completed twenty-five years apart. The actual identity of
Blue Boy remains a mystery, but years of research points to young Buttall as the most likely model.
Pinkie was commissioned by the grandmother of Sarah Barrett Moulton, aunt of poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning, although young Sarah passed away just a year after the painting's completion.
William Wilson, author of
The Los Angeles Times Book of California Museums, calls them "the Romeo and Juliet of Rococo portraiture".
I love, love, love, your transformation:)
Good idea!
Looks like Cher :)
She's kinda got that 80s hair going on in the "after" shot :)