- 137
South German School, circa 1600
Description
- South German School, circa 1600
- Portrait of an Ambassador
- oil on oak panel, unframed
Provenance
Catalogue Note
The armour the sitter wears is probably Augsburgian, but with anomalies in design that make it hard to identify with any certainty. The under skirt is woven with silver thread, and is decorated with the crescent moon of Islam and with eight pointed stars, each woven in gold thread and stitched with pearls and gemstones; the armour is trimmed in red velvet and edged in a running motif of musical instruments. Relations between the Habsburg Monarchy and the Ottoman Empire at the turn of the century were fractious. The Long Turkish War (or Thirteen Years' War) only finished in 1606 with the successful resistance of Prince of Transylvania, Stephen Bocskay (who had the support of the Ottoman Empire), to the forces for Emperor Rudolf II, which resulted in the Treaty of Vienna. The treaty significantly stabilized the Habsburg–Ottoman frontier. A 1596 print of Bocskay's nephew, Sigismund Báthory, Prince of Transylvania (1573–1613), depicts the sitter with a similar haircut to that of the present sitter, with its unusual shaves sides and longer top.
Infrared reflectography does not reveal any distinct underdrawing, but there a number of significant pentimenti visible. The sitter was initially depicted between two square columns. It would appear that the green curtain was added at a later stage, and was painted over the aforementioned columns. During the addition of the curtain, the profile of the sitter and positioning of his arm was adjusted. The table with the turban was also added over the right hand column. The now concealed columns both appear quite 'finished' suggesting that this compositional change occurred late in the painting's execution.
1. Report provided by Ian Tyers Tree-ring Analysis, June 2015.