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17th Century English SchoolPortrait of a Melancholic Gentleman, 17th century Oil Painting
$15,759.84
£11,500
€13,416.62
CA$21,587.04
A$24,009.50
CHF 12,537.01
MX$292,170.06
NOK 160,116.80
SEK 150,161.31
DKK 100,133.36
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About the Item
English School
17th Century
Portrait of a Melancholic Gentleman
Oil on canvas
Image size: 25 x 29 1/4 inches (63.5 x 72.25 cm)
Hand made contemporary style frame
Provenance
South of England Estate
This is a striking 17th century half-portrait of a man. He sits with his body turned to the left and his head to the right. His left hand is held in front of him with thumb and finger together. He wears a loose white shirt that is opened low down onto chest while being closed at his neck with a black ribbon. An orange cloak has also been draped across his arms in a rather dramatic manner.
This choice of costume is immediately notable and must be compared to other portraits of this time of Elizabethan courtiers wearing slashed silk outfits with ostentatious finery and silver swords. Indeed, if one examines 17th century English portraiture it becomes clear that often artists focused on the rich layers of decoration and luxurious fabrics of the wearers. The hope was that the illusion of the materials would, in turn, give the viewer the allusion of the sitter's position.
Here, we are not given finery or the exuberance of lavishly painted silk or lace. Instead, we are presented with a stripped back scene where the main impression is of a melancholic attitude and a deep intellectualism. With his loose long hair, form of undress and self-aware pose, it is clear that the gentleman is deliberately presenting himself in a melancholic manner. This became increasingly popular in the 17th century and can be seen in the work of van Dyck and Cornelius Johnson.
- Creator:17th Century English School (1600 - 1700, English)
- Dimensions:Height: 29.25 in (74.3 cm)Width: 23 in (58.42 cm)
- More Editions & Sizes:1 of 1Price: $15,760
- Medium:
- Period:
- Framing:Framing Options Available
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:London, GB
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU52412236972
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Image size: 29¼ x 23⅞ inches
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Provenance:
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Painted onto wooden panel, this portrait shows a dark haired gentleman in profile sporting an open white shirt. On top of this garments is a richly detailed black cloak, decorated with gold thread and lined with a sumptuous crimson lining. With the red silk inside it’s all very expensive and would fall under sumptuary laws – so this is a nobleman of high degree.
It’s melancholic air conforms to the contemporary popularity of this very human condition, evident in fashionable poetry and music of the period. In comparison to our own modern prejudices, melancholy was associated with creativity in this period.
This portrait appeared in the earliest described list of pictures of Warwick castle dating to 1762. Compiled by collector and antiquary Sir William Musgrave ‘taken from the information of Lord & Lady Warwick’ (Add. MSS, 5726 fol. 3) is described;
‘8. Earl of Essex – an original by Zuccharo – seen in profile with black hair. Holding a black robe across his breast with his right hand.’
As tempting as it is to imagine that this is a portrait of Robert Devereux, the 2nd Earl Essex, we might take this with a pinch of salt. Its identification with this romantic and fatal Elizabethan might well have been an attempt to add romance to Warwick Castle’s walls. It doesn’t correspond all that well with Essex’s portraits around 1600 after his return from Cadiz. Notably, this picture was presumably hung not too far away from the castle’s two portraits of Queen Elizabeth I. The first, and undoubtedly the best, being the exquisite coronation portrait that was sold by Lord Brooke in the late 1970s and now hangs in the National Portrait Gallery. The second, described as being ‘a copy from the original at Ld Hydes’, has yet to resurface.
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His linen shirt is edged with a delicate border of lace and his black cloak is lined on the inside with sumptuous scarlet and richly decorated on the outside with gold braid and a pattern of embroidered black spots.
Despite the richness of his clothes, William Herbert has been presented in a dishevelled state of semi-undress, his shirt unlaced far down his chest with the ties lying limply over his hand, indicating that he is in a state of distracted detachment. It has been suggested that the fashion for melancholy was rooted in an increase in self-consciousness and introspective reflection during the late 16th and early 17th centuries.
In contemporary literature melancholy was said to be caused by a plenitude of the melancholy humor, one of the four vital humors, which were thought to regulate the functions of the body. An abundance of the melancholia humor was associated with a heightened creativity and intellectual ability and hence melancholy was linked to the notion of genius, as reflected in the work of the Oxford scholar Robert Burton, who in his work ‘The Anatomy of Melancholy’, described the Malcontent as ‘of all others [the]… most witty, [who] causeth many times divine ravishment, and a kind of enthusiamus… which stirreth them up to be excellent Philosophers, Poets and Prophets.’ (R. Burton, The Anatomy of Melancholy, London, 1621 in R. Strong, ‘Elizabethan Malady: Melancholy in Elizabethan and Jacobean Portraits’, Apollo, LXXIX, 1964).
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