Gainsborough was the favorite English society portrait painter of his era. Like other British portraitists succeeding Anthony Van Dyck, the leading English court painter of the early 18th century, Gainsborough was strongly influenced by the Flemish master’s elegant yet relaxed likenesses. The pair of portraits of the Bassets exemplifies Gainsborough’s mature style, in which he developed a new, romantic approach to the genre. He rendered his subjects with loose, animated brushwork and enveloped them in wild landscape settings painted in a similarly impressionistic style. In this instance, Gainsborough connects the Bassets—born as commoners and therefore newcomers to wealth and society—directly with the natural world so important to their country’s landed aristocracy.
Frances Susanna’s lace- and pearl-trimmed yellow and blue gown—exemplifying Gainsborough’s reputation for brilliantly rendering the silks and satins of women’s dresses—and the feathers in her hat and hand indicate that the nostalgia for the former court painter held sway not only in portraiture but also in the fashion for attending parties in “Van Dyck dress.” The diaphanous wrap edging her garments plays a key role in integrating her figure into the wooded background. Barely visible along her right side but cascading down from her left hand and over the rock or tree stump on which she rests her elbow, the fabric seems to dissolve into the landscape. Likewise, her cascading curls are rendered in shapes echoing those of the nearby foliage.