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Lost Portrait of Robert Burns Goes on Display After 220 Years
The portrait, commissioned in 1803 and missing for 220 years, was authenticated by experts and is displayed before traveling to Burns's birthplace museum.
- On January 22, the long-lost Sir Henry Raeburn portrait of Robert Burns found during a Surrey house clearance last year went on display at National Galleries Scotland.
- Commissioned in 1803 for engraving, the portrait was created by Sir Henry Raeburn, based on Alexander Nasmyth’s 1787 painting and vanished for more than 200 years before rediscovery.
- Experts cleaned and examined the canvas, confirming the Raeburn attribution endorsed by James Holloway, Dr Duncan Thomson, Helen Smailes, Lesley Stevenson, and Dr Bendor Grosvenor.
- The rediscovery returns a major work to Scotland’s national art collection and it will move to the Robert Burns Birthplace Museum, Alloway, South Ayrshire, from July 21.
- Scholars said the find resolves decades of mystery and debate about the portrait’s fate, and for the first time Raeburn’s and Nasmyth’s portraits will hang side-by-side at the National Galleries on the Mound, Edinburgh.
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Robert Burns portrait missing since 1803 goes on display after house clearout discovery
A long-lost portrait of Scotland's national poet Robert Burns has gone on public display for the first time in more than 200 years. The painting by Sir Henry Raeburn surfaced during a house clearout in Surrey last March and now hangs at National Galleries Scotland ahead of Burns Night on January 25. | The latest National and International News
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Total News Sources16
Leaning Left4Leaning Right0Center4Last UpdatedBias Distribution50% Left, 50% Center
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources lean Left, 50% of the sources are Center
50% Center
L 50%
C 50%
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