Robert Goodloe Harper Pennington (October 9, 1854 – March 15, 1920) was an American artist and writer known for his portraits of New York and Newport socialites.
Early life
Pennington was born on October 9, 1854, in Baltimore, Maryland, and was named after his great-grandfather, the former U.S. SenatorRobert Goodloe Harper.[1] He was a son of William Clapham Pennington (1829–1913) and Emily Louisa (née Harper) Pennington (1835–1908).[2] His brother was Dr. Clapham Pennington.[3]
Pennington small portraits, in oil and pastel, show Whistler's influence and are sometimes mistaken for his work.[10] Whistler invited Pennington to return with him to London in 1880, but Pennington decided to travel and paint around Italy.[3] While in Venice, he made a portrait of Robert Browning for Katherine de Kay Bronson, a prominent American expatriate.[3]
After returning to London, Pennington took one of four studios at Carlyle Studios, alongside Theodore Roussel and George Percy Jacomb-Hood. In 1884, he made a full-length portrait of Oscar Wilde as a wedding gift for Wilde and his wife, Constance, which hung in Wilde's London home.[11] He also created fifteen engravings from drawings for Wilde's 1889 essay, London Models.[12] Pennington was a frequent visitor to Tite Street to see Whistler (whom he drew in 1885 while Whistler gave his Ten O'clock Lecture). In 1886 or 1887, Whistler drew Pennington's portrait for a second time.[3] While in London, Pennington was a member of the Beefsteak Club, a private dining club in Leicester Square, and was "exceedingly popular in both London and Paris".[8]
Pennington made several paintings for King Edward VII (then the Prince of Wales), "who was so well pleased with the artist's skill that he presented him with his photograph bearing his autograph."[8] In 1885, he made portraits of Patsy Cornwallis-West and the Misses Edith Clarke and Nellie Farren Calhoun while in London.[13] In 1899, Pennington wrote a letter to The New York Times, which was published in response to Layton Crippen's criticism of Henry Kirke Brown's sculpture of Washington in Union Square, where Pennington wrote:[14]
"Art is unlike trade. A masterpiece cannot be short measure; it is too personal. In conclusion, I would like to remind Mr. Crippen that some (very many, too,) of the greatest living sculptors are Americans. Indeed, no foreigners can give us points on art matters any longer. Of course, the 'good Americans,' whose eyes are always fixed on Paris, (where he is said to go when he dies,) cannot yet perceive what has grown up under his feet in architecture, sculpture, and painting, and, after all, in the making haste to become rich nobody cares."[14]
In 1908, he returned to Europe by traveling aboard the French liner La Provence to Paris.[8]
Personal life
On October 31, 1888, Pennington was married to Caroline DeWolfTheobald (1869–1962), a daughter of Dr. Samuel Theobald, a leading physician of Baltimore (and grandson of surgeon Nathan Ryno Smith).[15] Before their divorce in 1913,[16] they were the parents of four daughters and one son:[17]