Kit-cat portrait

For other items called Kit Kat or Kit Cat see Kit Kat (disambiguation).

A kit-cat portrait or kit-kat portrait is a particular size of portrait, less than half-length, but including the hands. The name originates from a series of portraits which were commissioned from Godfrey Kneller for members of the Kit-Cat Club, to be hung in their meeting place at Barn Elms. Each canvas was thirty-six inches long, and twenty-eight wide[1] The size is said to have been determined because the dining-room ceiling of the Kit-Kat Club was too low for half-size portraits of the members.

References

  1. ^ Malone wrote in Dryden 534 (1800)