tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post6759812728781817554..comments2024-03-26T00:10:40.751-04:00Comments on Reggie Darling: Oh, Those Beautiful BoardmansReggie Darlinghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04044215790585354363noreply@blogger.comBlogger25125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-89548021686085901972015-01-27T13:05:22.303-05:002015-01-27T13:05:22.303-05:00As A Boardman living in CT, I have had several unu...As A Boardman living in CT, I have had several unusual wonderful experiences crossing paths with members of this wonderful family. My Boardman Geneaology Book is taking me to their fabulous homes in my area, and to say that I spent time in these homes growing up not knowing the connection to my family makes for an interesting blog.ie: William Whiting Boardman's ( Elijah's son) Hillhouse Avenue home New haven where my Grandmother (no relation) to Boardman was a cook in that house for Rachel Trowbridge who's Father purchased the house from William W. Boardman. While working in East Haddam CT at Goodspeed Opera House, I was surrounded in my twenties by all things Boardman. The two Victoirian mansions built by Luther Boardman for himself and his son Norman, were occupied by the actors, and a well known gift shop The Seraph sat next door,now The Boardman House Inn. So close and I didn't know I was part of that family then. I did feel a strong connection for some reason. Luther and Norman were designers and manufactures of pewter and silverware. To finish, A sibling to three brothers, one is a teacher in East Haddam pure coincedence, another living in New York, and finally An Elijah Boardman clone living in Westport.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13904305239281970649noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-12625971955532959362014-02-20T23:37:11.092-05:002014-02-20T23:37:11.092-05:00Thank you, Anon, for your comment. I hope that yo...Thank you, Anon, for your comment. I hope that you inherited the looks of your ancestors, a handsome bunch, indeed! ReggieReggie Darlinghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04044215790585354363noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-76369262259906809342014-02-20T09:36:04.897-05:002014-02-20T09:36:04.897-05:00Speaking as a Boardman descendent, I am very glad ...Speaking as a Boardman descendent, I am very glad that this portrait hangs in the Metropolitan. I know of other portraits done for the family that are in boxes or the hands of relatives that don't necessarily appreciate them and certainly don't share them. I can proudly say that my ancestor hangs in the Metropolitan and that he and I have in common a love of dry goods!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-3471490146617775152011-12-19T17:13:56.712-05:002011-12-19T17:13:56.712-05:00What a wonderful post!
Thank you!!!
These pain...What a wonderful post! <br /><br />Thank you!!!<br /><br />These paintings are gorgeous!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-19592507910370813972010-09-30T01:14:14.989-04:002010-09-30T01:14:14.989-04:00Reggie, darling-Ive read this post at least four t...Reggie, darling-Ive read this post at least four times and all the terrific comments, for me-Elijah got the looks in the family and the house did too & HD must be a fabulous sister. pgtP.Gaye Tapp at Little Auguryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15115534755711063462noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-21874533630533305912010-09-29T23:04:50.890-04:002010-09-29T23:04:50.890-04:00Hermione --
Thanks so much for your very wise rem...Hermione --<br /><br />Thanks so much for your very wise remarks.<br /><br />I agree that many of today's great portraitists are lost to the world through contingent circumstance, just as so many others managed to come out of nowhere (or more exactly, tiny towns within driving of nowhere) in the Quattrocento.<br /><br />You and I also seem to agree that the extraordinary riches produced over the past thirty years by the financial markets and the high-tech industry ought to have induced at least some talented people to stick to their brushes. For whatever reason, that seems not to have happened.<br /><br />Frankly, I lament the diversion of artistic talent into the design of ever bigger yachts, ever smaller waistbands, and Daphne Guinness's shoes.<br /><br />On the other hand, I sometimes wonder if the world is really poorer because no West or Copley or Sargent or Sully or Peale or Jarvis was here to record the likeness of Dick Fuld.<br /><br />P.S. Perhaps Reggie will start illustrating at least some of his posts with apposite pencil drawings. I suspect he needs your encouragement, and to remember that no talent is ever really lost. It's merely misplaced.The Ancientnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-7167626717643205822010-09-27T16:21:30.169-04:002010-09-27T16:21:30.169-04:00PS Reggie himself is a good illustration of this c...PS Reggie himself is a good illustration of this conundrum. Had he been born a century earlier he could have even been another Sargent, perhaps. He had tremendous promise as an artist, but the combination of the time (representation is to be scorned) and the lack of reasonable returns steered him into the financial world. He cannot be blamed for this choice, but think of all the artists who have been stillborn, lost to posterity...<br /><br />Hermione D.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-7937942954915441172010-09-27T16:07:00.093-04:002010-09-27T16:07:00.093-04:00As an artist myself (although not a portraitist) I...As an artist myself (although not a portraitist) I would venture to say that the reason there are so few great portrait painters these days is the lack of great patrons. It is a kind of cf chicken-and-egg situation, but if no one hires your services there is little compulsion to put in the kind of time necessary to develope one's skills. Talent only goes so far - it is the concentrated practice of skill that allows that talent to be expressed. It is hard work to be an artist, and the poor returs for all but a very select few means that many who once would have shone brightly give up art for mammon (and who can blame them?)<br /><br />Hermione DarlingAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-81754361146725494352010-09-27T09:32:10.114-04:002010-09-27T09:32:10.114-04:001) Edith Hope raises an interesting question -- wh...1) Edith Hope raises an interesting question -- why don't people who can afford it commission more portraits?<br /><br />I think the answer is that there simply aren't enough painters left who can reliably produce a good portrait.<br /><br />And to make this point even simpler -- <i>there are virtually no painters left who can produce a high-quality oil copy of an existing portrait.</i><br /><br />2) Deborah Devonshire had the intestinal fortitude to trust her likeness to Lucian Freud, and good for her! But what person in his right mind would pay to have his wife or daughter painted by John Currin? (OK, an extreme example -- give a better example, if you can.)<br /><br />3) I have seen people, here and in Europe, produce great sketches. But a great portrait in oil? It's a lost art -- at least as obvious option for rich people. (Has there been a single artist since Sargent who could be commissioned to paint a great portrait? Even one?) I don't think so.<br /><br />I would be delighted to be proved wrong.<br /><br />(And no, Warhol doesn't count at all.)The Ancientnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-43814012991910669672010-09-27T08:19:08.167-04:002010-09-27T08:19:08.167-04:00David: Thank you for your comment. I remember you...David: Thank you for your comment. I remember your post. You should be sure to visit the Metropolitan when you are next in New York, as the experience of seeing the painting of Elijah Boardman in person (so to speak) is much more impressive than an image of it can convey.Reggie Darlinghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04044215790585354363noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-44113278914605683392010-09-26T18:02:53.407-04:002010-09-26T18:02:53.407-04:00Thanks you so much for this post. I have a picture...Thanks you so much for this post. I have a picture of EB on one of my posts ( http://willowbrookpark.blogspot.com/2010/02/gentleman-in-art.html )but had no idea who he was or any of his history. Great to fill in the gaps. David.Lord Cowellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08022567039394790375noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-37630267191367428032010-09-26T07:05:52.760-04:002010-09-26T07:05:52.760-04:0024 Corners: Thank you for your comment, and welcom...24 Corners: Thank you for your comment, and welcome. Reggie is indeed flattered that you spent so much time reading his scribbles. I am working on another Pompey post that I hope you will enjoy, so please stay tuned...Reggie Darlinghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04044215790585354363noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-47895882733059816042010-09-26T07:03:07.234-04:002010-09-26T07:03:07.234-04:00Ancient: You raise many compelling points in your ...Ancient: You raise many compelling points in your comment, and I thank you for doing so. I once shared my life with a man whose family owned a number of extremely valuable paintings by artists the names of which would be instantly recognizable to anyone reading this blog. The cost of insuring them, and the related fear of their being stolen (or damaged in any way) ultimately led them to donate several to museums and sell the rest at auction, where they realized stratospheric prices. Noone was happy that they left the family, but all were actually somewhat relieved they no longer shouldered the responsibility (and financial burden) of their ownership. And no one complained about the lovely compensation received. They were also fortunate that the Robber Baron who had acquired the paintings also acquired many lesser quality ones that although not particularly valuable in the scheme of things were beautiful indeed. So their walls did not go bare.<br /><br />My main beef with so much art going to museums is that so much of it sits in storage, never seeing the light of day. I'm happy for the museums to keep the masterpieces, so long as they display them. All the rest should be sent to auction, in my view, where the art will wind up in the houses and apartments of people who will enjoy living with them and seeing them daily. It's a win-win situation in my view, since museums are perpetually strapped for cash and the storage of lesser quality art is a burden to them, too.<br /><br />And yes, RL's use of so many portraits of aristocrats of days gone by in his stores can be sickening at times, but one does admire him as a merchant genius. I recommend that you read LPC's posting about the High WASP "take" on Mr. Lauren.Reggie Darlinghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04044215790585354363noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-24767147971289562912010-09-26T06:43:27.540-04:002010-09-26T06:43:27.540-04:00LPC: The denizens of the Connecticut River Valley ...LPC: The denizens of the Connecticut River Valley were a rich and cultured lot, and produced many patrons of the arts. As Ancient says, the Yale collections (and also those of the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford) would be a good place to look for portraits of your ancestors. Not that he was from that area, but within the Yale collection is a particularly noteworthy painting of a man of the cloth, titled "Bishop Berkeley and His Family", painted in the early 1700s by John Smibert. There are also several portraits there by Ralph Earl, too. I know the Yale collections particularly well because they were much studied by me when I was an undergraduate there, where I double-majored in English Lit and Art History, specializing in the American decorative arts. How I wound up in investment banking with that as my education is a long and tortured story...<br /><br />Mark Ruffner: Thank you for your comments, and welcome to RD. Yes, the details and flourishes of these paintings by Earl are marvelous, and what--among other things--elevates them from being mere representations in to true works of art.<br /><br />Blue and DED: Thank you, gentlemen. I believe we are the three of us kindred spirits when it comes to these things...<br /><br />Edith: I agree that it is unfortunate that the practice of having one's portrait painted by the great artists of the day has gone the way of the Dodo bird, at least except in the rarest of circles (one thinks of the Devonshires' patronage of Lucien Freud and the English Rothschilds' of David Hockney of course). There are no paintings of the owners of Darlington House that hang on our walls, but we do have a painting of our beloved Pompey.<br /><br />Patsy: Thanks<br /><br />Architect: I would enjoy seeing such pictures. I plan on going to see the house when I am next in New Milford, where I sometime find myself.Reggie Darlinghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04044215790585354363noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-85501929016796699132010-09-26T02:08:46.272-04:002010-09-26T02:08:46.272-04:00My goodness...I was only going to take a quick pee...My goodness...I was only going to take a quick peek at your blog and found myself sitting here for at least an hour! After being mesmerized by the visually stunning and historcally fascinating Boardman family...I became immersed in the delightful Pug chronicles, which touched me immensely and were a joy to read...all four of them!<br /><br />Please give Pompey a pat for me (or a scratch, whichever he likes most), and thank you for the wonderful read(s).<br />Jessica~24 Cornershttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13630767883910250689noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-89835621381022780122010-09-25T22:57:43.732-04:002010-09-25T22:57:43.732-04:00LPC --
If you're really interested, you might...LPC --<br /><br />If you're really interested, you might want to check the Yale collections, which hold portraits of several Connecticut River Valley preachers.<br /><br />(You'll have to write a letter with specifics; it can't be done online.)The Ancientnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-27412248272003190732010-09-25T22:09:02.151-04:002010-09-25T22:09:02.151-04:00Reggie --
I have very mixed feelings about this. ...Reggie --<br /><br />I have very mixed feelings about this. <br /><br />They're lovely pictures, to be sure. But why are they in museums? Why aren't they owned by the subjects' g-g-g-grandchildren? Why doesn't someone raise a glass to them at Christmas, or on New Year's?<br /><br />There are many reasons why pictures pass out of families, and some of them, I suspect, have little to do with money or taxes. Off-hand, I can think of several pictures that The Metropolitan would be happy to hang on its walls that are sequestered in boxes in other places because someone didn't care for their cousins, or offer to sell. But whether they hang on museum walls or are packed away elsewhere -- they're gone to the people who might genuinely care about them as subjects. They have become, at best, pretty objects.<br /><br />I have quite a few family paintings, and I would never part with any of them. <i>I hate the idea that they might some day hang on a museum wall -- or some place unimaginably worse.</i> OTOH, I realize that as generations pass, connections become attenuated, people run out of money, and there is often an insuperable temptation to sell important pictures to offset estate taxes.<br /><br />So someday, I suppose, the better of these pictures will ultimately be in museums. But they will be like the once brightly painted Greek and Roman statues we now see as plain marble -- stripped of everything that made them immediate, personal and alive. They will be mere objects, never subjects -- no matter what the label has to say.<br /><br />P.S. A vaguely related point: I loathe Ralph Lauren's use of 19th and early 20th century portraits in some his stores. Because if you think about it, every one of those pictures represents a family that failed, or died out, or both.The Ancientnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-33998451750565302322010-09-25T21:22:16.953-04:002010-09-25T21:22:16.953-04:00I keep coming back to the portrait of Elijah, and ...I keep coming back to the portrait of Elijah, and studying the detail. I would have loved to have seen all the original buttons and buckles that he donned for this portrait! ... MarkMark D. Ruffnerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09241533547309049140noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-74220500449854126202010-09-24T11:30:35.608-04:002010-09-24T11:30:35.608-04:00interesting that the painting of the house is larg...interesting that the painting of the house is larger than that of the daughter -very telling....<br />I remember seeing this house in new Milford when I was there a few years ago and have a few pictures of it that I need to dig out; Will send to you if I find the files.ArchitectDesign™https://www.blogger.com/profile/01481754380363676771noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-34695422117487578102010-09-24T10:49:19.493-04:002010-09-24T10:49:19.493-04:00Thank you for doing the research, Reggie! I thorou...Thank you for doing the research, Reggie! I thoroughly enjoyed the gorgeous paintings as well as the fascinating history.Patsyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02840629057159581688noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-7599349218682801802010-09-24T10:10:58.149-04:002010-09-24T10:10:58.149-04:00Dear Reggie, These portraits are indeed masterpiec...Dear Reggie, These portraits are indeed masterpieces and on such a grand scale. That for me makes them very special indeed and they must create a very impressive and dominant presence when viewed at first hand.<br /><br />I do so wish that the 'monied classes' would commission artists as much as their predecessors did since in this way, not only are artists afforded a living, but also there is a permanent record, with an artist's eye, for future generations to enjoy and learn from.<br /><br />A great friend of mine is a portrait painter and I have commissioned him more than once. For me, the most interesting part of the process is seeing that although the portrait is recognisable as me it is not an exact replica as a photograph would be. It is intriguing looking at what the artist sees rather than just what is there. Does, I wonder, a rendition of Reggie or Boy hang on the walls of Darlington House?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-49659378625980437662010-09-24T09:16:52.459-04:002010-09-24T09:16:52.459-04:00ahhhh. I have adored these paintings for years......ahhhh. I have adored these paintings for years...since childhood, when I first saw them published in an article in Antiques magazine. Still stunning.The Down East Dilettantehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13950254669198151850noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-4139378995011287112010-09-24T06:54:11.793-04:002010-09-24T06:54:11.793-04:00Good morning, Reggie. I have seen this portrait an...Good morning, Reggie. I have seen this portrait and like you was struck with the handsomeness of the man. Boardman's portrait is one of a number that appeal to me for roughly the same reason. There always seems to be a living quality to them - as if the painter was so enthralled he captured the life and character. <br /><br />Very good post to begin the day with. I'm so glad we had breakfast together.Bluehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07652670896513329236noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-83498706347441421022010-09-24T00:45:01.563-04:002010-09-24T00:45:01.563-04:00Thanks for such a beautifully researched posting. ...Thanks for such a beautifully researched posting. My favorite is of Elijah, and like you, I would visit it regularly. I'm intrigued by the bright blue lining in Daniel's hat. ... MarkMark D. Ruffnerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09241533547309049140noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8044541580633294348.post-18657513450178549602010-09-23T21:38:21.000-04:002010-09-23T21:38:21.000-04:00Ah, Reggie, you and I should discuss. My father co...Ah, Reggie, you and I should discuss. My father collects pieces in this vicinity, albeit nowhere near as handsome:). My mother is from the Connecticut River Valley, but evidently preacher men don't have their pictures painted::).LPChttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18209861350905135093noreply@blogger.com