Master Paintings Part I
Master Paintings Part I
Property Restituted to the Heirs of Ilse Hesselberger, sold to benefit New York charities
Portrait of a young man with a quill and a sheet of paper, possibly a self-portrait of the artist
Auction Closed
January 26, 05:50 PM GMT
Estimate
3,000,000 - 5,000,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Property Restituted to the Heirs of Ilse Hesselberger, sold to benefit New York charities
Agnolo di Cosimo, called Bronzino
Monticelli, near Florence 1503 - 1572 Florence
Portrait of a young man with a quill and a sheet of paper, possibly a self-portrait of the artist
inscribed on the reverse of the panel: Picus de Mirandula / Phoenix Mundiinscribed on the sheet of paper: Cogitat ut scribat, verum ut non scribat imago / Sponte sua scribit, sed neque sponte id agit / Ergo invita facit minimè nam scribere tantum / Destinat, ulterius, scribere, ne sit opus
oil on panel
30½ by 21⅝ in.; 77.5 by 54.9 cm.
Sir William Temple, MP (1628-1699), Moor Park, Surrey;
Thence by descent to his granddaughter, Elizabeth Temple (neé Temple)(1686-1770), Moor Park, Surrey;
Thence by descent to her nephew, Basil Bacon (1725-1775), Moor Park, Surrey;
Thence by descent to his heir and illegitimate son by Mary Margaret Williams (née Deveil), Charles Bacon (né Williams) (1751-1820);
Thence by descent to his second son, Kenrick Bacon (1801-1888), Moor Park, Surrey;
By whom sold ("Pictures formerly collected by Sir William Temple, and brought from the Family Seat, in Surrey"), London, Christie's, 30 March 1824, lot 64, for £95.11 (as Bronzino, "A very fine head and capital Portrait of Pico di Mirandola");
There acquired by Henry Seymour, JP, MP (1776-1849), Knoyle House, Wiltshire;
Thence by descent to Henry Danby Seymour (1820-1877), MP, 39 Upper Grosvenor Street and 209 Piccadilly, London, and Knoyle House, Wiltshire;
Thence by inheritance to his brother, Alfred Seymour, JP, MP (1824-1888), 47 Eaton Square, London and Knoyle House, Wiltshire;
Thence by inheritance to his wife, Isabella Seymour (née Leighton) (1834-1911), 6 Upper Brooke Street, London and Knoyle House, Wiltshire;
Thence by inheritance to their daughter, Jane Margaret Seymour (1873-1943), by 1911;
By whose trustees sold, London, Christie's, 23 January 1920, lot 78, for £157 (as Bronzino, "Portrait of Pico de Mirandola");
Where acquired by Hugh Blaker for £157 (according to Christie's ledger in the Frick);
Dr August Mayer, Schleissheim, by 1927;
From whom acquired by Julius Böhler, Munich, 4 July 1927, for M 5.000 (as Francesco Salviati);
From whom acquired by Frau Kommerzienrat Ilse Hesselberger (née Wertheim) (1888-1941), Munich, 5 October 1927, for M 14.000 (as Francesco Salviati);
From whom acquired by [Ludwig] Bretschneider, Munich, as a consequence of persecution, 1937/1938;
With Kunsthandlung Maria Gillhausen, Munich;
With Kunsthandlung Karl Seuffer, Munich;
From whom acquired by Reichskanzlei through Frau. Professor Gerdy Troost (1904-2003), 28 January 1941, for RM 55,000;
Führermuseum, Linz (inv. no. 1400, as Jacopino del Conte);
Kremsmünster Depot (inv. no. 1468);
Transferred to the Salt Mines at Alt Ausee (inv. no. 2795);
Wiesbaden Central Collecting Point (inv. no. 4058, in a blue and gold Renaissance style frame);
Transferred to the office of the Ministerpräsident, Wiesbaden, 10 August 1951, and thereafter the Deutsche Parlamentarische Gesellschaft;
Restituted to the estate of Gertrude (‘Trudy’) Sommer (daughter of Ilse Hesselberger), New York, 2021.