Showing posts with label Corsairette. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corsairette. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 January 2025

New Year Greetings from a "Corsairette"

Many of my regular visitors will recall that this time last year I posted a feature on a lost masterpiece by my namesake Sir Joshua Gregg RA. See A Corsairette for Christmas

Well, my blog post must have stirred up the watching aristocracy to search their dusty attics or basements for their (not-so?) illustrious  ancestors' hidden chatels. Another one, presumably from Sir Josh's 1780 under-cover trip across the channel. Nothing much is known about this one, recently emerging from an estate in Derbyshire which must remain nameless........so we have to guess.

Apart from the obvious naval garb - the gold lace on her tricorn suggests an officer, and the shipboard setting, we note the initials on a barrel - which could be "DA" for Capitaine Julienne's corsair brig "La Dauphine Amusante". Also in Josh's usual fashion he managed to work the lady's name somewhere into the scene, in this case on the barrel at right foreground. So we could call her Lieutenant Polina. With a name like that I'd like to think, despite that cute face, she is really a hard bitten Ukrainian pirate lady. Probably recruited by Julienne due to her experience and to help keep the crew, and those visiting merchants referred to in the previous blog, in order.

Lieutenant Polina - original painting in Acrylic on canvas 10 inches x 8 inches

It's not known if Sir Josh stayed long enough on board La Dauphine Amusante to go on a voyage, or merely painted crew members while in port. Such records as exist hint he might have even met on board some representatives of the French Government for "secret" talks on behalf of The Admiralty and the Diplomatic Service. That's why the need for the paintings as cover, as well as salacious art work to pay off those back home who turned a "blind eye". Whether this trip had anything to do with the French decision to side with the Americans in their Revolution we may never know......  As a mere artist I'm just wondering if you can get such a bright looking sunny day in a channel port? Or is it artistic licence?


......thought my military minded followers might like a closer look at the ....ummm...... weapons

I've continued to use this story again this year to do this small painting as my annual military pinup for a  Christmas card. Many of my wargaming buddies and military art clients will have received one. I hope you (and they) like it. Last year one client suggested the pirate theme was worth expanding so I had the opportunity in the Summer to work with a professional model who gets what I'm trying to do and loves to model exotic subjects. We had a fun day in the sunshine on various 18th Century themes and I've got lots of new reference material , including 5 different pirate ladies.

The set below gives a very quick idea of the art process I've been developing lately, involving Artificial Intelligence (AI).  At left is my model, Jo,  in a super confident naval officer pose - minus jacket! Her sword is elsewhere from other posing. I ran this as a prompt through an AI system with some suitably descriptive words. I tried lots of variations, and you can see this system (Nightcafe) wants to sanitise and cover the naughty parts. The next picture is my preferred AI result and I thought the face was suitably playful for a greetings card. The system was having a great time interpreting my photo as a formal garden with a boat and sail in it!! Who says it's "intelligent".  Well actually along the way I got lots more bits of costume and ship parts and I put them together with Photoshop to arrive at the mockup seen in the third photo.  The essence of it is still the majestic pose of Jo but enhanced. So the fourth picture is my finished painting, though a rather dull rendition in that reproduction. It's got a certain vibrancy in the original that does not reproduce easily at this scale.



"French" Naval Lieutenant Polina is my second "corsairette", and Number 38 in the general "Hussarette" series. She is for sale priced at £80 so please get in touch if you are interested, or wish to purchase or discuss any of my other work. 
I can be contacted through the Contact page in my Art website here
or have a look at more of my Hussarettes and Military art 

And now another idea to see if it appeals.
Fancy an original painting of a nice lady in uniform playing with your own .....toys?
Well I got mine out and Jo was happy to take up lots of poses as both officer and musketeer across the wargames table with part of my 28mm Seven Years War collection 

Mousquetaire Joleen behind the Hanoverian army

Colonel Joleen about to move some of the French army

Game underway getting a bit more into the mood!!!
 - a forward observer?

I also did a couple of sets around a wargames table with another model - as a Napoleonic Hussarette and a Zouavette of 1860 - 1870 period, so I have loads of interesting material from which to make paintings
and I don't need to be restricted to just these periods. Let your imaginations go and contact me if you have an idea you'd like to commission - either with your own models (the miniature ones) or my set up. Faces of course can be used to suit your taste, I can even put you in the picture too if so desired.

For more of the charming model Jo, please see the links to various social media and professional sites she appears on from her Linktree page. And if you feel like supporting her work financially there are opportunities there. I do recommend the "Admire Me" site in particular.

FINALLY - a heartfelt thanks for another year of great support for this blog. I really do appreciate you taking the time to look at the pics, read my descriptions and follow stories and the wargame AARs. In particular it's great if you can comment in some way - like all bloggers I like to know what you think and to know there are folks out there who like, or get inspiration from, my efforts.
HAPPY NEW YEAR


Sunday, 24 December 2023

A Corsairette for Christmas

When he started down the rocky road as a professional artist  Sir Joshua Gregg RA never imagined he would have to sneak into an enemy country, in disguise, to further his obsession to paint beautiful, exotic and dangerous women!

There is not much documentary evidence for this exploit as Sir Josh gave little away in his memoirs, for reasons which will become clear following such research as I have been able to do.  In 1780, when Sir Josh was in his mid 50s news, one might say only rumour, was spreading throughout London of a French Corsair causing havoc in The Channel among British merchant shipping taking supplies to the beleaguered British and Hessian troops in the American colonies. This brig was said to be "womaned" by an entirely female crew and led by a young, beautiful and ruthless daughter of a French aristocrat. Working outside the regular naval authorities, yet within the law under her "Lettre de Marque", signed by King Louis personally, this Capitaine, known only as Julienne, had evidently developed a unique method of parting the merchant crews from their precious cargoes.

Julienne - and Sir Joshua has depicted her Lettre de Marque pinned up for all on board to see 

Delving deep into archives of private letters and promissory notes, sometimes in dusty basements of English Historic Houses, one can piece together snippets of information from landed gentry, shipping magnates, senior Government officials, Admiralty ledgers and even from merchant sea captains and a few educated junior officers. Reading "between the lines" of the tortuous 18th century flowery language this is how she did it.

Julienne herself and some of the more well endowed and younger crew members would hail the passing ships, making out they were in distress with a false rigging and sails appearing to have been fouled by a storm.  The British sailors, unable to resist the beautiful French accents and obvious physical charms, having been at sea for at least a week, maybe two, went on board to help. Only then were cutlasses and pistols drawn and the, shall we say, well worn and more mature crew members then in evidence bearing these arms. But violence was not top of the agenda. Julienne's aim was to wreck the British trade by acquiring all these goods for her crew and for France. Rather she invited the merchant crews on board to "Party" in exchange for their cargoes - with the alternative as a watery grave......

Not surprisingly it was, as we say in the 21st Century, "a no-brainer" to enjoy the delights on board "La Dauphine Amusante" and write-off the cargoes as "washed overboard in a storm". The shipping owners could claim the insurance and surely the War in the Colonies would be won by the time Lloyds of London smelled a rat.

I have shamelessly taken a photo of Sir Joshua's painting and imagined Julienne
 inviting the viewer on board to have a Christmas party with her crew. Who 
could resist?
I used this as a Christmas card for my wargaming friends and military art clients

Once a journalist's take on this scandalous story made "The London Times" it became a hot topic of conversation in the coffee lounge of the Royal Academy in Piccadilly. As one of the RA's most trusted and long serving members Sir Josh was well placed with contacts among the Lords Commissioner of the Admiralty to arrange for him to be transported to France as "a private citizen", supposedly to conduct secret negotiations with the French (This was long before MI6 of course!). How he explained all those trunks of canvases, brushes and paints and his travelling easel we shall never know. There were naturally sceptical and sanctimonious types who were ready to brand Sir Josh a traitor, and Art Historians have come to suspect that he may have had to bribe quite a lot of well-placed members of Society to keep things quiet. Looking at Sir Josh's life's work, and his early studies under that French reprobate artist, Francois Boucher, (see for example) it's not hard to imagine that, in the fullness of time,  a number of sketches or paintings of other members of the crew will emerge. They will have been kept under lock and key by the hypocritical owners for fear of being denounced in Parliament or their Church! However, if any come up on TV's "Fake or Fortune", I for one will be avidly interested.

We can only guess that Sir Josh had managed to get a message ahead to convince Capitaine Julienne that this was not some British trick but a genuine effort to flatter her ego and satisfy his own curiosity. What else Sir  Josh managed to satisfy of course he kept very quiet about! But we do know he was very fit and healthy for his age and an advocate of a non-meat diet, so who knows what he got up to when away from Lady Josh's oversight! For Josh, of course there was a professional motive. Once the War was over and the shame of giving up the American colonies died down, he was happy to exhibit "Capitaine Julienne" in the Royal Academy Members Exhibition of 1784. His fame took a boost and the commissions once again rolled in from the Great and Good of England. An excerpt from one historian's  analysis gives an idea of how this notorious portrait drew even more acclaim than Sir Josh's "Prince of Wales" in the same year.

"However, his most admired work by far was his portrait of the French Corsairette Julienne in the guise of a sea captain. The painting attracted rapt reviews and was widely esteemed—as it still is today—to be one of Sir Joshua’s finest. Yet as the The Whitehall Evening-Post shrewdly observed, this triumph was due, at least in part, to the circumstances of its display. While noting that, “in the present Exhibition Sir Joshua stands so proudly pre-eminent,” the journal expressed “our regret, that Gainsborough should not have kept his ground.” Had he done so, it gamely wagered, “he would, doubtless, have shared the prize of publick applause with the President, and have afforded good ground for solid and substantial doubts, which of the two deserved the better half.”

As a fan of all these esteemed 18th Century portrait artists I remain strictly neutral! However one might speculate that some of Sir Josh's resultant commissions were from those secretly involved in his sojourn on the French coast in 1780, and needed a "cover" themselves.

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Well I hope you've enjoyed my little seasonal tale of Alternative History. For the more artistically minded you might find it interesting how my painting came about.

I've accumulated a lot of commissions during the early part of 2023 for paintings of ladies of various types - Fantasy in sheer dresses, Hussarettes and even 1860s/70s Zouavettes and by September I hired a professional model living not that far from me. We had two very long and productive sessions with about 8 major costume changes involving many uniforms and props and wigs and with indoor and outdoor settings. No doubt those who follow me on Instagram or my website will see the results in due course. For this one I started off with a couple of Hussarette photos which I thought promising and ran them through an Artificial Intelligence system called MidJourney.

AI for artists like me is a tortuous process and I'm still very much at an experimental stage. The AI system doesn't accept too much flesh on display so I had to "add" the blue breeches in Photoshop to fool it. But the point was that I did not know what to expect and one goes through many iterations, asking for variations and then getting multiple choices from which to proceed further. Here are some examples, not in progressive generation order though.



The one at bottom right looked reasonably "authentic" as something I could use in an 18th Century context and weave a story round. You will note from these examples that the AI seems to be pre-destined to give somewhat "steampunk" costumes and settings. It can't cope with a Napoleonic Hussar pelisse nor render a bicorne hat except as if the wearer is some kind of sailor or pirate.


Never mind, as a source for the fanaticism of Sir Joshua Gregg's brush it proved fruitful!






So I took that image and worked it up in the AI and Photoshop to the proportions I wanted for my canvas and added the candle, barrel, short sword, pistol, glass of wine, background enigmatic evening sky and "Lettre de marque" to provide the following reference from which to paint.

What follows are pics of a very condensed view of the process in realising the acrylic painting.

The painting area and the opening outlines based on pencil drawing

White acrylic outline on black gesso ground gives me a very good starting point for colour

The candle and distant background are the only parts complete so far

Finishing the face early gives it character and encourages me to press on 

The figure is complete, now I just have to tidy up the mahogany shelving, barrel, wine glass and final tightening up.

Here is the final painting

"Capitaine Julienne, Corsairette, 1780" (Nr 34 in the Hussarette Series)
Acrylic on canvas, 12 inches x 10 inches

Detail of cutlass and pistol

"Julienne " is in my opinion a super painting and the actual article is a gem. Much better than any of the pictures here suggest. I hope one of by regular collectors may like it, or indeed if you want to start your collection of my "Hussarettes" what better than this one at under £100? Please email me if you are interested in discussing it. Chris Gregg

Here also is a link to my Art website - for Military Art, Hussarettes, Landscapes, Fantasy and Female figures Chris Gregg Art

I wish all my regulars and new visitors alike a Great Christmas and a really happy, healthy and successful 2024.