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Portrait of Hendrik III, Count of Nassau-Breda, c 1516-17
Location:
Kimbell Art Museum
Medium: Oil on panel
by Jan Gossart/Gossaert (c. 1478 – 1 October 1532)
Having accompanied his patron Philip of Burgundy to Rome
in 1508–9, Jan Gossart was one of the first artists to disseminate the Italian
style in the Low Countries. The subject of this portrait is Hendrik III, Count
of Nassau-Breda (1483–1538). An esteemed statesman and captain general, Hendrik
was entrusted with the education of the Emperor Maximilian’s grandson, the
future Emperor Charles V, who appointed him governor of Holland, Zeeland, and
Friesland in 1515.
In keeping with the meticulous attention to detail of
the northern schools, Gossart carefully renders the textures of the carpet, fur
collar, buttons, and checkered black-and-gold doublet, creating an image of
jewel-like intensity. The count wears the pendant of the Order of the Golden
Fleece, the elite chivalric order dedicated to the defense of the church. The
sitter’s features are finely delineated (the underdrawing is visible around the
lips, nose, and chin) to achieve a sympathetic likeness. The marked illusionism
of the work, with the fictive frame and figure’s shadow cast against the feigned
green marble backplate, derives from the great Flemish master Jan van Eyck.
Gossart’s close study of Italian art is evident in the imposing bulk and
balanced composition of the figure.
Hendrik III was an adventuresome and
noteworthy art patron. An Italian visitor’s diary remarks on the beautiful
pictures he saw in Hendrik’s palace in Brussels in 1517, including Hieronymus
Bosch’s Garden of Earthly Delights (Museo del Prado, Madrid), which the count
very likely commissioned.
Provenance: Baron Alfred Charles de Rothschild
[1842-1918], Seamore Place, London and Halton House, Buckinghamshire, England;
by bequest to his daughter, Almina Victoria Marie Alexandra Carnarvon, Countess
of Carnarvon [1877-1969], London, 1918; (her sale, Christie’s, London, 22 May
1925, no. 71); purchased by (Thomas Agnew & Sons, Ltd., London) for £4,620. (Sir
Joseph Duveen, 1st Baron Duveen of Milbank [1869-1939], London and New York,
before 1927); Ernst Rosenfeld, New York, by 1930. Mr. Charles V. [1890-1979 and
Mrs. Catherine Barker Hickox [1896-1970], New York and Chicago, by 1939;
(Newhouse Galleries, Inc., New York); purchased by Kimbell Art Foundation, Fort
Worth, 1979.
Rights: Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas