The Blue Boy, oil painting created by English artist Thomas Gainsborough about 1770. The full-length portrait is one of the most recognized paintings in art history.
This dazzling portrait won great acclaim when it was first exhibited in 1770, cementing Gainsborough’s reputation as one of the finest painters of his day. At the time, the artist was earning a good living in the fashionable English city of Bath, but he still had a reputation to maintain in London. He exhibited The Blue Boy (then titled A Portrait of a Young Gentleman) at a prestigious new venue, the Royal Academy, which had staged its first exhibition in 1769.
The picture was probably not commissioned—it was painted on a used canvas, over another portrait. The sitter is unknown, though some historians have identified him as Jonathan Buttall, the son of a London ironmonger, and a close friend of Gainsborough’s, while others believe the subject to be a nephew of the artist, Gainsborough Dupont. The youth’s fancy clothing is reminiscent of that found in the costume portraits of Anthony van Dyck, one of Gainsborough’s chief influences.
Like van Dyck’s pictures, Gainsborough’s works are flamboyant and supremely elegant, and they display a brilliant, virtuoso technique. Gainsborough liked to paint in subdued lighting conditions, particularly candlelight, which probably accounts for his flickering, feathery brushstrokes. He also rejected the contemporary taste for a smooth, detailed finish, insisting that his work should always be viewed from a distance. He reportedly commented dryly that paintings were “not made to be smelled” to a client who ignored this advice. Gainsborough also took particular care with his landscape backgrounds, ensuring that they complemented the mood of the picture.