Francis Russell (art historian)

Francis Russell (born 1949) is a British travel writer, historian and art expert.[1]

He was educated at the Dragon School, Westminster and Christ Church, Oxford, where he read history. Russell's maternal grandfather was the chemist and mountaineer George Ingle Finch; both his father, the botanist and Arctic explorer Robert Scott Russell,[2] and his brother were also mountaineers.[3]

Russell joined Christie's as a specialist in 1972, initially in the Department of Old Master Drawings and later in Old Master Pictures. He is a former Head of the International Old Master Picture Department.[4] He advised Gervase Jackson-Stops on the selection of paintings and assisted on the catalogue for the Treasure Houses of Britain exhibition at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., and has published discoveries by artists as varied as Fra Angelico, Pontormo and Wright of Derby.[5]

Considered one of the world's leading experts on Early Italian Renaissance gold-ground painting, Russell was a friend and frequent correspondent of Miklós Boskovits and Everett Fahy.[6] He is also an expert on Italian Seicento and Settecento painting, especially Venetian vedute by artists such as Canaletto and Guardi, and on British eighteenth-century art history. His first published monograph was a catalogue of the iconography of Sir Walter Scott.[7]

  1. ^ "Francis Russell". Bitter Lemon Press. Retrieved 17 October 2024.
  2. ^ "Robert Scott Russell". Encyclopaedia Britannica.
  3. ^ Robert Wainwright, The Maverick Mountaineer: The Remarkable Life of George Ingle Finch: Climber, Scientist, Inventor, Atlantic Books, 2017, 'Acknowledgments and Notes on Sources'
  4. ^ "London: Francis Russell". Christie's.
  5. ^ Gervase Jackson-Stops, ed., The treasure houses of Britain: Five hundred years of private patronage and art collecting, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1985, catalogue of the exhibition at The National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 3 November 1985 – 16 March 1986.
  6. ^ Jayne Wrightsman, The Wrightsman Pictures, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2005.
  7. ^ Francis Russell, Portraits of Sir Walter Scott: A study of romantic portraiture, London, 1987.