Leslie Ward
Sir Leslie Matthew Ward (21 November 1851 – 15 May 1922 London) was a British portrait artist and caricaturist who over four decades painted 1,325 portraits which were regularly published by Vanity Fair, under the pseudonyms "Spy" and "Drawl". The portraits were produced as watercolours and turned into chromolithographs for publication in the magazine. These were then usually reproduced on better paper and sold as prints. Such was his influence in the genre that all Vanity Fair caricatures are sometimes referred to as "Spy Cartoons" regardless of who the artist actually was.
Early portraits, almost always full-length (judges at the bench being the main exception), had a stronger element of caricature and usually distorted the proportions of the body, with a very large head and upper body supported on much smaller lower parts. Later, as he became socially accepted in the society in which he moved to gain access to his subjects, and not wishing to cause offence, his style developed into what he called 'characteristic portraits', being less of a caricature and more of an actual portrait of the subject, using realistic body proportions.[1]
Background
Ward was one of eight children of artists Edward Matthew Ward and Henrietta Ward, and the great-grandson of the artist James Ward. Although they had the same surname before marriage, Ward's parents were not related. Both were well-known history painters, his mother coming from a line of painters and engravers, including her father, the engraver and miniature painter George Raphael Ward, and her grandfather, the celebrated animal painter James Ward. She was niece and great-niece respectively of the portrait painter John Jackson and the painter George Morland. Both parents had studios in their homes in Slough and Kensington in London, where they regularly entertained the London artistic and literary elite. Ward's father was a gifted mimic who entertained Charles Dickens and other eminent guests. Although they never gave their son formal training, they and their artistic friends encouraged the young Ward to draw, paint, and sculpt.[2]
Ward had started caricaturing while still at school at Eton College, using his classmates and school masters as subjects. In 1867 his bust of his brother was exhibited at the Royal Academy in London. At school Ward had been an unexceptional student, and after he left Eton in 1869 his father encouraged him to train as an architect. Ward was too afraid to tell his father that he wanted to be an artist and he spent an unhappy year in the office of the architect Sydney Smirke, who was a family friend. The artist W. P. Frith spoke to Ward's father on his behalf, and after a great deal of arguing he finally agreed to support his son's training as an artist, and Ward entered the Royal Academy Schools in 1871. In 1873 he sent some of his work to Thomas Gibson Bowles, four years after Vanity Fair was founded. This led to his being hired to replace 'Ape', who had temporarily left the magazine after falling out with Bowles. As his nom de crayon, Ward suggested to Bowles that he use the name 'Spy', meaning "to observe secretly, or to discover at a distance or in concealment".[2]
Vanity Fair
Ward drew 1,325 cartoons for Vanity Fair between 1873 and 1911, many of which captured the personality of his subjects. His portraits of royalty, nobility, and women, however, were over-sympathetic, if not sycophantic. Later, as he became a member of Society himself, he became even more of a complimentary portraitist, moving from caricature to what he termed "characteristic portraits', a charge he acknowledged in his autobiography Forty Years of 'Spy', published in 1915.[1]
Ward worked methodically, often from memory, after observing his 'victims' at the racecourse, in the law courts, in church, in the university lecture theatre, or in the lobby of the Houses of Parliament. Sometimes they came to his studio to pose in their robes or uniforms. A caricaturist, Ward believed, was born, not made. He observed, 'A good memory, an eye for detail, and a mind to appreciate and grasp the whole atmosphere and peculiarity of the "subject" are of course essentials'.[2] A caricature, he noted, should never depend on a physical defect, nor should it be forced. 'If I could sum up the art in a sentence it would be that caricature should be a comic impression with a kindly touch, and always devoid of vulgarity'.[3]
In an 1897 interview given by Oliver Armstrong Fry (editor of Vanity Fair) to Frank Banfield of Cassell's Magazine, it was reported that Ward received a sum of between £300 and £400 for a portrait. Ward was the most famous Vanity Fair artist; indeed, the whole genre tends to be named after him, the caricatures often being referred to as 'Spy Cartoons'. He worked for Vanity Fair for over forty years, producing more than half of the 2,387 caricatures published.
Later years
Ward's clubs included the Arts, the Orleans, the Fielding, the Lotus, the Punch Bowl, and the Beefsteak, where he was one of the original members. There he sketched many of his victims. In 1899, years after her father had refused him permission to marry her, Ward married the society hostess Judith Mary Topham-Watney, the only daughter of Major Richard Topham of the 4th Queen's Own Hussars. They had one daughter, Sidney.[1]
Ward's last cartoon for Vanity Fair appeared in June 1911 as he had recently begun to contribute his 'characteristic portraits' to The World and Mayfair. He supplemented his income by painting portraits. In 1918 he was knighted.[4] Ward prophesied that "when the history of the Victorian era comes to be written in true perspective, the most faithful mirror and record of representative men and spirit of their times will be sought and found in Vanity Fair".[2] After a nervous breakdown Ward died suddenly of heart failure at 4 Dorset Square, Marylebone, London on 15 May 1922 and was buried on 18 May at Kensal Green Cemetery in London.
About 300 of his original watercolours for Vanity Fair are in the National Portrait Gallery, London.[1]
Gallery
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Guglielmo Marconi, 1905
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Harold Hilton, 1903
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Nasser al-Din Shah Qajar, 1873
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William Maynard Gomm, 1873
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Edward Marshall Hall, 1903
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W. S. Gilbert, 1881
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Fred Archer, the jockey
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The Hon. Bernard FitzPatrick (The 2nd Baron Castletown from 1883), 1882
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Mrs Georgina Weldon, 1884
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Franz Liszt, 1886
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Hamo Thornycroft, 1892
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Joseph Barnby, 1894
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George du Maurier, 1896
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Arthur Moseley Channell, 1898
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Sir Charles Cayzer, 1st Baronet, 1904, shipping magnate and MP
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Herbert Henry Asquith, later Prime Minister, 1904
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Admiral Sir Compton Edward Domvile, 1906
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Robert Maxwell, 1906
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William Ramsay, 1908
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 Peter Mellini, 'Ward, Sir Leslie [Spy] (1851–1922)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
- 1 2 3 4 Leslie Ward, Forty Years of 'Spy', London: Chatto and Windus, 1915
- ↑ R. T. Matthews, 'Spy', British History Illustrated, 2 (June–July 1976), pgs 50–57
- ↑ Wood, Margaret E. (2010). "A Tale of Two Knights". Chemical Heritage. 28 (1). Retrieved 7 April 2014.
Publications
- Ward, Leslie, Forty Years of 'Spy', London: Chatto and Windus (1915)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leslie Ward. |
- National Portrait Gallery – Index of "Spy" portraits
- National Portrait Gallery – Index of portraits of Sir Leslie Ward
- Sir Leslie Ward biography
- Spy cartoons
- Works by Leslie Ward at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Leslie Ward at Internet Archive
- Forty Years of 'Spy' at Project Gutenberg (Ward's biography)