George Rogers, His Wife Margaret, and His Sister Margaret by Francis Hayman. An 18th-century group portrait featuring a man with a hunting bird and rifle alongside two women in shimmering silk gowns in a wooded setting.

George Rogers, His Wife Margaret, and His Sister Margaret

Francis Hayman

1750 · Oil Paint, Canvas

A refined mid-18th-century English portrait capturing a group in an elegant outdoor landscape.

$239

For the selected configuration

From $129

3 frame sizes

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Where it works

A measured, grounding piece with warm, lived-in color — holds a composed wall with restraint.

Often works in
Dining Room · Living Room · Study
Placement
Works well as a contained focal point
Walls
Benefits from light or mid-tone surroundings
Color notes
Charcoal black, Deep burgundy, Rich brown

About the piece

Painted around 1750 by Francis Hayman, this 'conversation piece' depicts George Rogers with his wife and sister. The composition is a masterclass in mid-century British portraiture, highlighting the shimmering textures of the women's silk dresses—one in soft rose and the other in a cool, silvery blue—against the grounding, dark tones of a massive oak tree and distant rolling hills.