Portrait of George III
| Support Type: | Canvas |
| Paint Type: | Oil Paint |
| Current Location: | Herbert Art Gallery & Museum |
| Location History: | This picture was commissioned by the city authorities of Coventry to hang in St Mary's Guildhall. It was displayed at the Royal Academy Exhibition of 1792 held at Somerset House in London. |
This portrait depicts King George III, the third Hanoverian monarch who is also nicknamed “Farmer George” (interestingly, the name George means “farmer”) for his interest in agriculture, similarly to his descendant King Charles III’s long-term advocacy for environmental causes. George III also witnessed the independence of what is now the United States of America, and later suffered from a mental illness, even shaking hands with a tree, believing he was shaking hands with the King of Prussia. Upon his death, George III was the longest-reigning British monarch until the reign of his granddaughter Queen Victoria and Queen Elizabeth II, and continues to be the longest-reigning British king today. This painting depicts George III in Windsor Castle, dressed in the robes of the Master of the Order of the Garter, to inspire support for him while France was going through revolution. In 1809, the artist Thomas Lawrence produced another portrait of George III, dressed for the State Opening of Parliament. Lawrence was a child prodigy in Bath before he relocated to London. Lawrence was twenty-three years old when he painted this work, which was produced on his own, unlike many of his other portraits, which his assistants mainly painted while he finished them.
