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All about the subject, and not the artist

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Will Gompertz | 16:00 UK time, Wednesday, 7 July 2010

This morning launched to go towards the total cost of £554,937.50 to buy a portrait of Ayuba Suleiman Diallo. He's hardly a household name, but he is important.

Portrait of Ayuba Suleiman DialloThe painting according to the National Portrait Gallery (NPG) is the first known portrait that honours a named African subject as an individual and an equal, and thereby gives a useful insight into Britain in the 18th Century.

This statement tells you all you need to know about what makes the NPG different from and, from the perspective of social history, more interesting than other art galleries. It makes clear that the sitter is more important than the artist. The NPG doesn't want this painting because it's an exquisite example of 18th Century British art, but because the story of the sitter and its significance is so compelling.

Ayuba Suleiman Diallo, or Job ben Solomon as his English friends liked to call him, was a west African slave trader. The phrase "what goes around comes around" probably wasn't in much use in those days but, had it been, perhaps the wealthy Ayuba might have been more on his guard.

One day on a business trip to sell some slaves down the River Gambia, he suffered the indignity of being captured and enslaved himself. He was put onto a British ship bound for Maryland where he was sold to work on a tobacco plantation. An English lawyer and missionary called Thomas Bluett met him and decided he was "no common slave", so in the early 1730s he whisked him off to London and introduced him to high society.

Black, Muslim, highly-educated individuals were not common in those days, leading to Ayuba becoming something of a celebrity. His friends arranged for a portrait to be painted of him and chose the artist William Hoare of Bath, a founding member of the Royal Academy.

Ayuba was a religious man and didn't really go for the idea of a portrait, worrying that people would worship the picture. Or, as Thomas Bluett put it in his memoirs:

"Job's aversion to pictures of all sorts, was exceeding great; insomuch, that it was with great difficulty that he could be brought to sit for his own. We assured him that we never worshipped any picture, and that we wanted his for no other end but to jeep us in mind of him. He at last consented to have it drawn; which was done by Mr Hoare."

In fact it is the earliest known painting by the artist. The picture was painted in 1733 and, apparently at the sitter's request, has him in traditional dress and carrying a copy of the Qur'an around his neck.

And since then, till now, it has not been seen in public. It was thought to be lost and was only known about though Bluett's memoir, but then it turned up at auction in 2009 where it was bought by a private collector who wants to take it abroad. stepped in and now it is on show, for all to see at the National Portrait Gallery, while they attempt to raise the funds to secure it for the nation.

It seems likely they will, as they have already raised over £500,000 with contributions from the Heritage Lottery Fund, the Art Fund and the NPG's own contribution.

Back in the mid-1700s the money was raised for Ayuba Suleiman Diallo to be released from slavery and sent back to Africa. Whereupon he started up in business again. As a slave trader.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    If the sitter is more important than the artist, then why on earth spend so extravagantly in securing the original? Why not have a good copy made and hang that instead? If as you say the job in hand is to encourage an audience to engage with the sitter's biography rather than with any quality of the painting itself, what difference could it possibly make?

  • Comment number 2.

    I don't much care for this painting.

    It's artistic merits seem very limited.

    I feel that to buy this would be money down the drain.

  • Comment number 3.

    I agree whole-heartedly with Trin Tragula.

  • Comment number 4.

    Is this sitter really important at all? If the National Portrait Gallery had a rogues gallery then he might have earned his place. But it seems very dubious that a man of any colour race or religion should be honoured in any way at all when his credentials are that he sold his own people as slaves. Better that he's allowed to slip out of the country without another thought.

  • Comment number 5.

    I have to disagree; the artist's intentions are what frame the boundaries of meaning, of course this includes knowledge of the sitter. I take the Wollheim view of art criticism to back this up

  • Comment number 6.

    The dysfunctionality of the subject matter makes this a perfect example of the confusion of art in extremis. I must muse on the subject a little more.

  • Comment number 7.

    Not only was he a slave trader himself, but after his release he never showed any interest in freeing any other slaves, not even the ones that he and his own family had sold. I bet the National Portrait Gallery won't be launching any appeals to keep a portrait of a white slave trader, and nor would the Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú be supporting them.

  • Comment number 8.

    Frankly, I'd like the see the over 60s and under 16s free swimming reinstated rather than any 'high art'. It is about priorities and the health of the people is far more important than the loss of any art work in my opinion. First the DCMS and the National Lottery should help the living before the dead.....

  • Comment number 9.

    What a pity the NPG didn't think to arrange a Private Treaty Sale before it came up for auction last year. With an estimate of £50-80,000 they should have been able to secure it from it's British owner for rather less than the hammer price now required.

  • Comment number 10.

    Is it actually that colour? Does it need restoring or was it Hoare's Picasso moment; when you run out of a colour, use brown?

    And I see the NPG have omitted all reference to him being a slave trader in their appeal.

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