Studio of
Charles Jervas
, Irish, c.1675-1739
Title
Portrait of Jonathan Swift (1667-1745), SatiristDate1709/16
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions
76.3 x 63.5 cm
Credit LinePurchased, 1875
Object numberNGI.177
DescriptionDean Jonathan Swift was born in Dublin. After an undistinguished career at Trinity College he was employed as secretary to the English politician Sir William Temple in Surrey. To further his career Swift took Holy Orders but spent little time in Ireland, preferring to spend time in London, where he wrote brilliant and acerbic political pamphlets and anti-Whig lampoons for his Tory friends. Gulliver's Travels, however, Swift's most famous satire on society, was written while he Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin. This portrait of Swift was painted by the Irish artist Charles Jervas, who studied in Italy and was a pupil of Godfrey Kneller, the leading portrait painter of his generation in England. Though Kneller's style and treatment of the figure was hugely influential on artists, British and Irish, for almost a century, Jervas proved an innovative portraitist in his own right.