Detail from The Canal, Amsterdam, 1889, James McNeill Whistler, The Hunterian, University of Glasgow

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Frederick Richards Leyland

Nationality: British
Date of birth: 30 September 1831
Place of birth: Liverpool
Date of death: 4 January 1892
Place of death: London
Category: collector, ship-0wner

Identity:

Frederick Richards Leyland, ship-owner, merchant and art collector, was the son of Ann and John Leyland. He married Frances Dawson (1834-1910) in 1855 but they separated in 1879. Their children were Frederick Dawson (b. 1856), Fanny (b. 1857), Florence (b. 1859) and Elinor (1861-1952).

Life:

A Liverpool shipowner and patron of artists including Whistler, Leyland served as an apprentice in the firm of John Bibby, Sons & Co., where he rose to become a partner. He founded the Leyland shipping line in 1873. The first commissions by the 'Liverpool Medici', to Rossetti and Whistler date from 1864 and 1867. He collected Renaissance art, as well as that of the Pre-Raphaelites, Whistler and Albert Moore.

In 1867 he took on the tenancy of Speke Hall, Liverpool, and in 1869 bought a house in London at 49 Princes Gate. He was an able pianist and a man of considerable taste and talent. He entertained lavishly and Whistler visited him frequently at Speke Hall, but he was apparently not easy to get on with. Whistler painted his portrait (Arrangement in Black: Portrait of F. R. Leyland y097) there in August 1870, 'my own martyrdom', he called it (Leyland to Whistler, #02565). The completed portrait was exhibited in 1874, at Whistler's one-man exhibition, which Leyland is said to have financed.

Leyland commissioned portraits of all his family (Symphony in Flesh Colour and Pink: Portrait of Mrs Frances Leyland y106 et seq., to The Blue Girl: Portrait of Miss Elinor Leyland y111), and many lovely drawings also resulted. Other paintings for Leyland include 'The Six Projects' (Venus y082 et seq.) and The Three Girls y088. The decorations he painted for Leyland's London house (Panels from the Entrance Hall at 49 Princes Gate y175, Harmony in Blue and Gold: The Peacock Room y178) caused the quarrel in 1876-7 which ended their relationship. Leyland felt that Whistler had exceeded his commission and refused to pay the 2000 guineas Whistler demanded. Whistler later drew and painted several caricatures of Leyland (The Gold Scab y208, The Loves of the Lobsters y209, Portrait of Captain Williams y010), as he felt that Leyland was the chief cause of his bankruptcy in 1878 and was vitriolic in his criticism.

Bibliography:

Merrill, Linda, The Peacock Room. A Cultural Biography, New Haven and London, 1998 .

'Frederick Richards Leyland', Ancestry.co.uk