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James, Duke of York, (later James II) and Anne Hyde, Duchess of York
Located in London, GB
After Sir Peter Lely, Late 17th Century
(1618–1680)
James, Duke of York, (later James II) and Anne Hyde, Duchess of York
Chalk on paper
Image size: 8...
Category
17th Century Portrait Drawings and Watercolors
Materials
Paper, Chalk
Portrait of William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke, Early 17th Century Portrait
Located in London, GB
English School, (circa 1600)
Portrait of William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke
Oil on panel, oval
Image size: 29¼ x 23⅞ inches
Painted wooden frame
Provenance:
176, Collection of Francis Greville, 1st Earl of Warwick.
The Trustees of the Lord Brooks’ Settlement, (removed from Warwick Castle).
Sotheby’s, London, 22nd March 1968, lot 81.
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.
The portrait eventually ended up being hung in the State Bedroom of Warwick Castle.
Archival documents present one other interesting candidate. The Greville family’s earliest inventory of paintings, made in 1630 at their home Brooke House in Holborn, London, describes five portraits of identified figures. All five belonged to the courtier, politician and poet Sir Fulke Greville (1554-1628), 1st Baron Brooke, and were hung in the ‘Gallerie’ of Brooke House behind yellow curtains. One of them was described as being of ‘Lord of Pembrooke’, which is likely to have been William Herbert (1580-1630), 3rd Earl of Pembroke. William was the eldest son of Greville’s best friend’s sister Mary Sidney, and was brought up in the particularly literary and poetically orientated household which his mother had supported. Notably, the 3rd Earl was one of the figures that Shakespeare’s first folio was dedicated to in 1623.
The melancholic air to the portrait corresponds to William’s own pretensions as a learned and poetic figure. The richness of the robe in the painting, sporting golden thread and a spotted black fabric, is indicative of wealth beyond that of a simple poet or actor. The portrait’s dating to around the year 1600 might have coincided with William’s father death and his own rise to the Pembroke Earldom. This period of his life too was imbued with personal sadness, as an illicit affair with a Mary Fitton had resulted in a pregnancy and eventual banishment by Elizabeth I to Wilton after a short spell in Fleet Prison. His illegitimate son died shortly after being born. Despite being a close follower of the Earl of Essex, William had side-stepped supporting Devereux in the fatal uprising against the Queen and eventually regained favour at the court of the next monarch James I.
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).
Melancholy was viewed as a highly fashionable affliction under Elizabeth I, and her successor James I, and a dejected demeanour was adopted by wealthy young men, often presenting themselves as scholars or despondent lovers, as reflected in the portraiture and literature from this period. Although the sitter in this portrait is, as yet, unidentified, it seems probable that he was a nobleman with literary or artistic ambitions, following in the same vain as such famous figures as the aristocratic poet and dramatist, Edward de Vere...
Category
Early 17th Century Old Masters Portrait Paintings
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Art Gallery, Portico, Dark Evening - 20th Century Oil
Located in London, GB
Howard Jenkins
Flourished 1920 - 1950
Art Gallery, Portico, Dark Evening
Oil on board, signed verso and inscribed
Image size: 12 x 10 inches
Contemporary frame
Category
20th Century Landscape Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
Gorleston on Sea, Norfolk, 20th Century British Artist, Seascape
By Frederick Donald Blake
Located in London, GB
Frederick Donald Blake RI, RMSI
1908–1997
Gorleston on Sea, Norfolk
Gouache, signed lower right
Image size: 6 x 16¼ inches (15 x 41 cm)
Hand made gilt frame
Category
Mid-20th Century Landscape Drawings and Watercolors
Materials
Gouache
Reflections, American 20th Century Oil Painting
By Philip Campbell Curtis
Located in London, GB
Philip Campbell Curtis
American 1907 - 2000
Reflections
Oil on board, signed and dated 1960
Image size: 12 ½ x 5 ½ inches
Original frame
Category
1960s Surrealist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil
S.S. Arankola in Rangoon, Early 20th Century British Watercolour
By Frank Henry Mason
Located in London, GB
Frank Henry Mason
1875 – 1965
Steamship in Asia
Gouache on paper
Image size: 8 x 15 inches
Acid free mount and hand made gilt frame
Original artwork for a carriage print for steam...
Category
1930s Art Deco Landscape Drawings and Watercolors
Materials
Gouache
Nestlé - Original Artwork for Advertisement
Located in London, GB
C.M.
European 1946
Nestlé
Gouache on paper
Image size: 38 x 24 inches
£300
Category
Mid-20th Century Figurative Drawings and Watercolors
Materials
Paper, Gouache
Street Tailors in Cairo - Original Sketch, 19th Century
By Carl Friedrich Heinrich Werner
Located in London, GB
CARL FRIEDRICH HEINRICH WERNER
1808 - 1894
Street Tailors in Cairo
Graphite on Paper
Image Size: 13 ¾ x 19 ¾ inches
Acid free mount
SKETCHES OF CARL WERNER EXHIBITION
AT OUR G...
Category
19th Century Figurative Drawings and Watercolors
Materials
Paper, Graphite
Sunset, 20th Century British Gouache Painting
By Charles Paine
Located in London, GB
Charles Paine
1895 - 1967
Sunset
Gouache, signed lower right with monogram
Image size: 2 ¾ × 2 ¾ inches
Acid free mount and black frame
£350
Category
20th Century Figurative Drawings and Watercolors
Materials
Gouache
Walmer
By Keith Holmes
Located in London, GB
Keith Holmes
Contemporary
Walmer
Oil on board, signed
Image size: 15 ¼ x 9 ¾ inches
Framed
Born in Richmond, North Yorkshire, Keith studied fine art at West Surrey College of Art and Design before qualifying as a paper conservator at Camberwell School of Art and Crafts. In 1977 he was visiting professor on the conservation programme run by New York State University, where he taught conservation studies at postgraduate level.
He is a fellow of the International Institute of Conservation and Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts. He divides his time between work as a practising artist, a freelance conservator and the renovation of a disused chapel/boathouse where he lives with two Bengal cats...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Landscape Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
$5,515
Crescent Grove, Clapham - Oil, 20th Century
By Gordon Scott
Located in London, GB
Gordon Scott
1914 - 2016
Crescent Grove, Clapham
Oil on canvas
Image size: 18 x 24 inches
Contemporary style frame
GORDON SCOTT EXHIBITION AT DARNLEY F...
Category
20th Century Landscape Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Camouflage - Watercolour, War Artist
By Harold Yates
Located in London, GB
Harold Yates
1916 - 2001
Camouflage
Pencil and watercolour, signed and dated "42" lower right
Image size: 6 ¾ x 9 ¾ inches
Framed
Acid free mount
As a soldier in the Army during World War II, Yates did documentary work which was purchased by the War Artists...
Category
20th Century Figurative Drawings and Watercolors
Materials
Watercolor, Pencil
Kent Landscape, 20th Century English Artist, Signed Watercolour
By Rowland Hilder
Located in London, GB
Rowland Hilder
1905 - 1993
Kent Landscape
Watercolour, signed lower right
Image size: 23 x 34 cm
Framed
Though of staunch English stock, Hilder chanced to be born in Long Island, New York, where as a child he caught his first glimpse of pictures hanging on walls when his father took him to the mansions of the resident millionaires. When war broke out the family sailed back to England; and when it was over a perceptive schoolmaster, recognising a natural talent for drawing, set him on the road to Goldsmiths' College, in London. There he joined the etching class, but soon transferred to drawing under the noted illustrator Edmund J. Sullivan, to which Hilder acknowledged a lifelong debt. He developed into a versatile illustrator and draughtsman, with commissions that ranged from a 1930 edition of Mary Webb...
Category
20th Century Landscape Drawings and Watercolors
Materials
Watercolor