
Andrew Plimer
A young Officer, wearing staff officer’s uniform for the rank of an Aide de Camp of the 2nd Dragoon guards, his scarlet coat with lace in pairs, dark blue collar and epaulette, the regiment ‘2DG’ on his shoulder belt-plate, c. 1800
Watercolour on ivory
Oval, 2.5in (65mm) high
Philip Mould & Co.
To view all current artworks for sale visit philipmould.com Although at present unidentified, this portrait shows an officer wearing the uniform in the rank of Aide de Camp, probably...
To view all current artworks for sale visit philipmould.com
Although at present unidentified, this portrait shows an officer wearing the uniform in the rank of Aide de Camp, probably in the 2nd Dragoon guards. He may have served under the leadership of George Townshend, 1st Marquess Townshend, (1724-1807). The officer in this portrait may have returned briefly from campaigns during the French Revolutionary Wars, which ended in the uneasy peace formalised in the Treaty of Amiens in 1802.Born in Shropshire and apprenticed to a clockmaker, the artist Andrew Plimer and his brother Nathaniel purportedly ran away, arriving in London in 1781 where Andrew found employment as a manservant in the household of Richard Cosway R.A. (1742-1821). Cosway, who by this point was a highly regarded portrait miniaturist, allowed Plimer to take lessons in painting, and a few years later in 1785 Plimer established his own practice. By the next year Plimer was exhibiting at the Royal Academy from an address in Golden Square, then a fashionable part of London, where he appears to have remained until 1810. In 1835 he retired to Brighton with his family where he died two years later. This portrait dates from the pinnacle of Plimer’s career, when he had developed his style into a recognisable hand. By this date, his patrons were drawn from the fashionable aristocracy who also graced Cosway’s studio.