The portrait of seven year old Charles William Lambton was painted for the subject's father by Sir Thomas Lawrence for the price of 600 guineas and was completed in 1825. William T. Whitley's Art of England 1821-1837 states a contemporary writer in News of Literature and Fashion reported that Lawrence had originally painted the boy's clothes in yellow, despite the latter's father being called the "yellow dandy". John Lambton tormented Lawrence "on the score of the unfitness of the colour, until he got it blotted out by the crimson." Whitley also mentions that when the painting was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1825, the Hanging Committee of George Jones, Alfred Edward Chalon and Thomas Phillips chose the painting to be hung high up in the School of Painting, away from the Great Room. Lambton believed this to be due to him being a Whig and declared he would never buy another picture from a Royal Academician. However, D. E. Williams's The Life and Correspondence of Sir Thomas Lawrence, Kt. published in 1831 claims that the original yellow "produced an unpleasant monotony with the browns of the gravel and rocks forming the back ground." The painting later attracted much praise when it was exhibited in Paris in 1827.
Later history
The death of the third Earl of Durham in 1928 and the fourth earl a year later in 1929 brought large death duties. As the new fifth earl used Lambton Castle only occasionally, he closed it and held an auction of its valuable furniture and paintings in 1932, which included The Red Boy. However, after two years, the reserve was not met after each bid and the painting remained unsold in 1934. In 1929, the painting was exhibited at the North East Coast Exhibition, then in 1934 at Bessie Surtees House, both in Newcastle Upon Tyne. It was also exhibited as part of an exhibition that ran alongside the Festival of Britain at Bowes Museum in 1951 and again there in 1988.
Reproduction
featured the painting on his Wilkins Red Boy Toffee. Megan Marshall's The Peabody Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited American Romanticism mentions Sophia Hawthorne and Elizabeth Peabody as having copied the painting. In 1936, Charles's great-niece, Diana Mary Lambton, married William Hedworth Williamson at St Margaret's, Westminster, and their pageboys wore matching outfits to the painting. Raymond Jolliffe also wore the same as a pageboy at Lord Lovat's wedding in 1938. In 1967, the painting appeared on a British postage stamp.