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| Catalogue_No. | 28 | |
| Artist |
SIR PETER PAUL RUBENS | |
| Period |
15771640 | |
| Title |
Presumed portrait
of the Marchesa Veronica Spinola Doria |
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| Media/Size | Oil on canvas 52 x 41.5 ins |
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The other, signed and dated 1606, of a woman with subtly different features, but in an identical white and gold dress, differing only in the ornaments of her hair and in the presence of a rich gold and enamel chain in place of the simple rope of pearls worn by the present sitter, is at Kingston Lacy (NT, Dorset; Corpus Rubenianum, XIX, No. 43; Christopher White, Peter Paul Rubens, 1987, p. 47 and col. pls 16 and 66). She was originally identified as the Marchesa Brigida Spinola Doria, and now as Veronica Spinola Doria. The other, signed and dated 1606, of a woman with subtly different features, but in an identical white and gold dress, differing only in the ornaments of her hair and in the presence of a rich gold and enamel chain in place of the simple rope of pearls worn by the present sitter, is at Kingston Lacy (NT, Dorset; Corpus Rubenianum, No. 42 exh cat The Treasure Houses of Britain, National Gallery of Art, Washington, 19856, No. 496, with col. pl.). Known from the time of her acquisition by William Bankes in 1840 as a member of the Grimaldi family, she has been identified beyond reasonable doubt by Michael Jaffé as the Marchesa Caterina Grimaldi, and her sister, shown with a dwarf in the pendant at Kingston Lacy, as the Marchesa Maria Grimaldi. It is only a third portrait of a standing woman dressed in white and gold in the National Gallery of Art in Washington, also once full-length, but reduced to a three-quarter length, that can be firmly identified, from an inscription on the verso, as the Marchesa Brigida Spinola Doria, painted at the age of 22 in 1606, in the year following her marriage to Giacomo Massimiliano Doria (Corpus Rubenianum; No. 41; Colin Eisler, Paintings from the Samuel H Kress Collection: European Schools, excluding Italian, 1977, pp. 1013 and figs 956). The similarity of the features and dress in the Washington painting has encouraged the proposition that it is her younger sister Veronica who is the sitter in the portraits at Karlsruhe (dressed in black, whilst she was still unmarried) and at Buscot (in white, after her marriage to Giacomos brother, Giancarlo Doria, on 2 June 1608). It must, however, be admitted that the arguments for this identification are very tenuous. In view of the fact that the first record of the Buscot picture is in the Palazzo Grillo Cattaneo, more thought should perhaps be given to whether the Karlsruhe picture might not rather be the portrait of Ginevra Grillo that her husband, Paolo Agostino Doria, had commissioned from Rubens along with another of himself, on which the artist had apparently begun working, since Paolo Agostino Doria wrote to Rome in 1606 to find out what progress he had made on them (Corpus Rubenianum, Nos 39 and 40). The portraits here and at Karlsruhe and Kingston Lacy
have tended to be discussed somewhat in isolation from one another, as
though they were autonomous pictures of an equal standard. It is, however,
exceptional for Rubens to have simply adopted the same compositional formula
for portraits of two different sitters, or even of the same sitter differently
clad. It seems fairly certain that it was with the signed and dated portrait
of the Marchesa Caterina Grimaldi at Kingston Lacy that Rubens created
the prototype on his second visit to Genoa, in 1606. He painted the Marchesa
Brigida Spinola Doria as a result of the same visit, and then employed
the same scheme as for Caterina Grimaldi in his presumed portrait of the
Marchesa Veronica Spinola dressed in black at Karlsruhe. The present picture
would seem not to have been painted until after the sitters marriage
in June 1608, no doubt as a bridal portrait for her new home, whilst the
original portrait would have stayed with her own family. This means that
the present picture must have been executed by Rubens in the brief period
between then and his mothers imminent death, which had him hurrying
home to Antwerp at the end of October. He was thus employing the same
compositional formula for the third time in the present picture, and probably
re-employing a study of the Marchesa Veronicas face that he had
originally used for the Karlsruhe portrait. |
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