‘Once-in-a-lifetime discovery’: Sir Henry Raeburn’s missing portrait of Robert Burns is found after 220 years

Dr William (Bill) Zachs, Director of Blackie House Library and Museum in Edinburgh, photographed with re-discovered portrait of Robert Burns by Henry Raeburn (left) and portrait of Robert Burns by Alexander Nasmyth, 1787 (right). Photo Credit Nick Mailer

National Galleries Scotland: National, The Mound, Edinburgh

On display from 22 January – Free

A lost portrait of the famous Scottish poet, Robert Burns, by the renowned artist Sir Henry Raeburn has been found after over 200 years. The painting will go on public display for the first time to celebrate Burns Night (25 January). It will be available to view free of charge at National Galleries Scotland: National, on the Mound in Edinburgh, from 22 January.

The painting of Robert Burns was found during a house clearance in Surrey and consigned to auction in Wimbledon, London in March 2025. With a starting price of between £300─£500, the winning bid was £68,000. A triumph against all the odds, Dr William (Bill) Zachs, Director of Blackie House Library and Museum in Edinburgh and long-term Burns scholar and enthusiast, understood the potential significance of the painting and purchased the portrait believing it could be the elusive missing artwork. The painting has since been cleaned, and examined by experts, who confirm that it is, indeed, the lost Raeburn portrait.

Commissioned in 1803 ─ at a fee of 20 guineas ─ by the publishers Cadell & Davies, the painting was to be engraved for future editions of Burns’s books, but, the painting has not been seen since. Its whereabouts remained a mystery for many decades. In 1924 TCF Brotchie, the Director of Glasgow Art Galleries and Museums, wrote that the painting’s discovery would be ‘an event bordering upon the sensational’. Lovers of Robert Burns and art experts alike have long debated the painting’s location. This resulted in much press and journal coverage over the decades, as various portraits of Burns were attributed to Raeburn. However, all were dismissed and the painting remained lost until now.

Robert Burns (1759–1796), Scotland’s national poet, has had a lasting influence on literature, music and popular culture. His work continues to shape Scotland’s cultural identity and resonates with audiences worldwide. The original 1787 portrait was painted by the Edinburgh-born artist Alexander Nasmyth as part of a marketing strategy for the second (Edinburgh) edition of Burns’s breakthrough book, Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect. This painting, which is now recognised across the world, is part of Scotland’s national art collection. Despite Nasmyth’s move away from portraiture towards landscape painting, he took the job, declining to accept a fee, as he became a friend of Burns. For the first time, Raeburn and Nasmyth’s paintings will go on display side by side at the National gallery on the Mound in Edinburgh, to allow visitors to make their own comparisons of the two portraits.

Following the publication of the second edition of his poems, in 1787, Burns became a social phenomenon. The inclusion of an engraving of Nasmyth’s portrait made the poet an instantly recognisable celebrity.

Burns had already achieved fame by the end of his short life, having passed away at just 37 years old, but became a Scottish national icon in the 19th and 20th centuriesSuch was his popularity that in 1802 the publishers Cadell & Davies decided to commission a new version of Nasmyth’s original 1787 portrait for use in future publications.

By this time Burns’s close friend Alexander Cunningham was the custodian of the Nasmyth painting. He agreed to the proposal, advising that there was only one choice of artist, Henry Raeburn (1756–1823).  

One of Scotland’s most celebrated painters, Raeburn was a leading portraitist of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. He is renowned for his powerful, direct style and iconic portraits of Scots. Over the years correspondence between Raeburn and Cadell & Davies, regarding both the commission and the delivery of the painting, has come to light. This proved the existence of the artwork, although with no clues as to where it ended up. One letter dated 22 February 1804 from Raeburn reads: ‘Nothing could be more gratifying to me than the approbation you express of the copy I made’.

While the commission was to be based on the Nasmyth, Raeburn transformed the painting into a life-size portrait, using his considerable and instantly recognisable skills and expressive brushstrokes to bring Burns to life. Thin paint layers are applied in the artist’s characteristic direct manner using a warm palette of colours, capturing the essence of the poet effortlessly.

The painting has since been cleaned and examined, with several experts agreeing that this is the lost Raeburn portrait of Burns. The Raeburn attribution has been confirmed by: James Holloway, former Director of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery; Dr Duncan Thomson, former Keeper of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery;Helen Smailes, Senior Curator of British Art at the National Galleries of Scotland; Lesley Stevenson, Senior Paintings Conservator at the National Galleries of Scotland; and Dr Bendor Grosvenor, art historian.

The discovery of the painting promises to add significantly to our appreciation of Scotland’s greatest portrait painter, Sir Henry Raeburn. It also adds a new dimension to our understanding of the cultural afterlife of Nasmyth’s 1787 portrait, already internationally famous as a symbol of Scottish national identity. 

Extensive research has recently been carried out on the history of the painting, but this is just the start of our journey towards a greater understanding of this compelling rediscovery.

William Zachs is lending the painting to the National Galleries of Scotland, to go on display for free from 22 January at National Galleries Scotland: National on the Mound in Edinburgh. It will then tour to the Robert Burns Birthplace Museum (National Trust for Scotland) in Alloway from 21 July.  

William Zachs, owner of the painting and Director of Blackie House Library and Museum in Edinburgh said: ‘This week at Burns Suppers in Scotland and around the world we toast the Immortal Memory of the poet.

“Now we have a new immortal visual memory – a once lost painting by Sir Henry Raeburn, the Scottish great portrait artist, that depicts Robert Burns not just as a genius poet but as a celebrated (and handsome) Scotsman whose significance would endure “till a’ the seas gang dry”.’

Lesley Stevenson, Senior Conservator (Paintings), at the National Galleries of Scotland said: ‘Raeburn’s expressive, seemingly effortless brushwork, the characteristic warm palette, soft, atmospheric lighting and sensitive rendering of the instantly recognisable Robert Burns, are a joy.

“This is a significant discovery and one we can all celebrate.’

Dr Duncan Thomson, former Keeper of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery 1982─1997 and curator of the last major exhibition on Sir Henry Raeburn, National Galleries of Scotland, 1997, said: ‘The rediscovery of this portrait of Burns, after having disappeared for two hundred years, is of enormous significance, linking the poet with Scotland’s greatest artist.

“Although Raeburn was working from an image made by another painter, the portrait has that wonderful freshness of observation that marks Raeburn’s work at its best.

“It is more than likely that Raeburn had seen Burns in his heyday in Edinburgh a decade earlier, and had observed that glowing eye that had so impressed the young Walter Scott. The result is a portrait that speaks in an entirely new way of the warmth, the sensuality and the profound intelligence that we find in Burns’s poetry.’

James Holloway, former Director of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery 1997─2012 said: ‘This is a once in a generation discovery: thrilling for lovers of both Burns and Raeburn.’

Professor Murray Pittock, Pro Vice-Principal University of Glasgow‘Raeburn’s portrait of Burns shines with the glow which is typical of the painter.

“It shows the now-dead poet moving into the realm of legendary icon, a transition he was to accomplish within less than a generation. In that sense the Burns we celebrate today is Raeburn’s Burns, though until now we did not know it.’

Professor Gerard Carruthers FRSE, Francis Hutcheson Professor of Scottish Literature at the University of Glasgow said: ‘A lost likeness of Burns and a new Raeburn to boot: this really is two red letter days in one.

“There have been rumours of the portrait’s existence over many decades, but the recent detective work to authenticate has been simply outstanding.’

National Galleries of Scotland marks Sir Henry Raeburn’s 200th anniversary by welcoming rare portrait to the National collection

Neil Hanna www.neilhannaphotography.co.uk 07702 246823

The National Galleries of Scotland has announced the acquisition of Patrick Moir, (1769–1810), 1785‒6 by the celebrated Scottish artist, Sir Henry Raeburn. Marking the bicentenary of Raeburn’s death on 8 July 1823, this unique portrait is now on display and available to view for free at the National in Edinburgh.

This exciting new acquisition joins the most comprehensive and internationally important collection of Raeburn’s work, held by the National Galleries of Scotland on behalf of the nation. The national collection also includes Raeburn’s much loved and incredibly popular ‘Skating Minister’ painting, Reverend Robert Walker (1755‒1808) Skating on Duddingston Loch, about 1795, also on display at the National.

Patrick Moir, 1769–1810, gives important insight into Raeburn’s early development as an artist. The painting depicts a known individual but also owes much to a fashionable type of composition or ‘fancy picture’ – half-portrait and half-genre – which was internationally popular at the time.

This rare portrait was painted in Rome at a key moment in Raeburn’s life and career, and is the only known portrait dating from his one study visit to Italy (from 1784‒6).  It will join the National Galleries of Scotland’s significant holdings of art relating to Scots undertaking a ‘Grand Tour’ of Italy, including works by Allan Ramsay and William Aikman. In spite of the great expense involved, many artists aspired to travel to Italy in the 18th and 19th centuries, like the so-called ‘Grand Tourists

During his visit to Rome, Raeburn’s most influential acquaintance was James Byres of Tonley (1734–1817), a well-known dealer in antiquities and ‘Old Master’ paintings. Byres was also a popular tour guide, especially for Scottish ‘Grand Tourists’. Patrick Moir, 1769–1810 is a portrait of Byres’s young nephew, the son of Reverend George Moir (1741–1818) of Peterhead in North East Scotland.

Neil Hanna www.neilhannaphotography.co.uk 07702 246823

In time, Patrick managed his uncle’s business and became known as the ‘English Banker in Rome’ and a supplier of funds to Cardinal York, brother of Prince Charles Edward Stewart. The portrait is believed to have been commissioned by Byres and is the only known full-scale portrait associated with Raeburn’s visit to Italy. It remained in Rome with the rest of Byres’s art collection during the turmoil of the city’s invasion by French revolutionary troops. Its survival and eventual return to Byres in Aberdeenshire is one of the many fascinating stories attached to this unassuming portrait.

Sir Henry Raeburn (1756–1823) was the top Scottish portrait painter of the late 18th and early 19th century. In his lifetime he painted more than 1000 canvases, despite lacking any formal artistic training.  

He was born in the village of Stockbridge, then on the outskirts of Edinburgh and was later apprenticed to a local goldsmith. This is when he began experimenting with portrait miniatures, eventually progressing to full-scale portraits.  

From the late 1790s Raeburn established himself in a spacious custom-built studio at Number 16 (now 32) York Place on the eastern edge of Edinburgh’s Georgian New Town. In 1819 he was elected to the New York Academy of the Fine ArtsThree years later he was knighted during George IV’s State visit to Edinburgh, followed by appointment as portrait painter to the King in Scotland.

To celebrate the anniversary of Sir Henry Raeburn, and this new acquisition, the National Galleries of Scotland hosted a free public lecture on Tuesday 4 July.

Available online or in person at the National, Senior Curator Helen Smailes explores the origins and wider cultural context of this rare pictures, together with Raeburn’s fascination with sculpture.

Neil Hanna www.neilhannaphotography.co.uk 07702 246823

National Galleries of Scotland Senior Curator, Helen Smailes, said: “This fascinating painting has been a cherished heirloom of the Moir-Byres family since 1785 and is a remarkable survivor of the French invasion of Italy in the 1790s.

“Raeburn’s only known portrait painted in Rome, its acquisition has transformed the Galleries’ internationally important holdings of his work. We are delighted to have been able to save Patrick Moir for the nation in Raeburn’s bicentenary year, with the unwavering commitment of the Moir-Byres family and generous support from The Art Fund.”

Jenny Waldman, Director, Art Fund, said: “This rare painting is the only known surviving full-scale portrait from Sir Henry Raeburn’s stay in Italy, a formative moment in the artist’s career.

“I’m thrilled that Art Fund has been able to support this important acquisition, where it will join the National Galleries of Scotland’s world-leading collection of Raeburn’s work for the public to enjoy for many years to come.”

Neil Hanna www.neilhannaphotography.co.uk 07702 246823

The National Galleries of Scotland acquired the painting through the Private Treaty Sale scheme, which allows private owners to sell items considered to be culturally pre-eminent to national organisations without recourse to an auction process and with prices beneficial to both. 

The acquisition was enabled by £54,000 support from Art Fund, together with funds from the Cowan Smith and Treaty of Union Bequests (National Galleries of Scotland).