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Portsmouth Dockyard is an 1877 oil painting by French artistJames Tissot. It is a reworking of his 1876 paintingOn The Thames, which also depicts a man and two women in a boat. It measures 15.0 by 21.5 inches (38 cm × 55 cm).
The painting depicts three people sitting in a rowing boat among the towering naval vessels inPortsmouth Dockyard, with another rowing boat crewed by naval personnel passing in the background before the bows of two old-fashionedsquare riggedships of the line. In the background is a modernironclad warship. In the centre is a man wearing the uniform of a sergeant in aHighland Regiment, withredcoat,kilt, andfeather bonnet. He sits with his legs crossed, and his hands clasped around one bare knee. He is turning away from the unhappy woman to his left - in cream dress and tartan shawl or blanket, and herparasol up - and towards the smiling woman to his right - in white and black striped dress, with shawl over her arm and parasol furled.
This 1877 painting is a reworking of Tissot's 1876 paintingOn The Thames, which depicts a man and two women reclining lazily aboard a boat moving through crowded shipping on theRiver Thames.On The Thames was shown at theRoyal Academy in 1876 but it was poorly received, with critics questioning the sexual morality of the subjects: one critic described it as "wilfully vulgar", and another disparagingly as "more French than English". Tissot's less ambiguous 1877 reworking of the subject inPortsmouth Dockyard was more favourably received, but the story remains unclear. Perhaps there is some flirtation between the man and the woman to the left; perhaps the second woman a chaperone, or a sister.
The painting was exhibited at theGrosvenor Gallery in 1877 under the titlePortsmouth Dockyard. The same year, Tissot made adrypoint copy of the painting, which was reproduced as anetching in two editions of around 100 prints each, measuring 9.75 by 13.75 inches (248 mm × 349 mm), under the French titleEntre les Deux mon Coeur balance (literally, "Between the two my heart swings"; sometimes translated as "How happy I could be with either"). An etching of the drypoint reproduction was sold atSotheby's in 2013 for £1,125, described as a work on "the theme of comic rivalry in the affairs of the heart", and one was sold atBonhams in 2018 for $937.
The painting was bought by the Lancashire corn merchant Henry Jump, and descended through his family. It was sold atChristie's in 1937 under the titleDivided Attention, bought byLeicester Galleries for 58 guineas, and exhibited at Leicester Galleries under the titleEntre les Deux mon Coeur balance (the title of Tissot's drypoint and etching of the same subject). The painting was sold to SirHugh Walpole, who left it to theTate Gallery on his death in 1941. The Tate first exhibited it in 1942 under the titleHow happy could he be with either, later returning to the original titlePortsmouth Dockyard. It remains in the collection of the Tate.
