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An unknown noblewoman

17th Century

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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Cornelius Johnson (1593 – 1661), An unknown noblewoman

Cornelius Johnson (1593 – 1661)

An unknown noblewoman
Oil on panel
30 ½ x 24 in. (77.5 x 61 cm.)
Monogrammed and dated, lower right: ‘C.J. fecit/ 1624’
Copyright: The Weiss Gallery, London
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This elegant portrait is an early example of the artist’s work when he mainly painted on panel. Johnson’s first signed pieces date from 1619, and by 1624 his assured, carefully modelled portraits were already much admired. Our unknown lady was in the past mistaken for another likeness by the artist of Margaret Lytton, Lady Hewytt, (Claydon House, Buckinghamshire, National Trust), as both women wear near identical monochrome dresses highlighted by red embroidered rosettes and matching girdles. Here, the flashes of red compliment the young woman’s covetable pink and white complexion and rosy lips, a confection of exquisite stylised beauty. Johnson painted both sitters in feigned marble ovals, as though set in stone for posterity. Along with the English artist William Larkin, he was one of the earliest proponents of this format, mimicking the miniaturist tradition of painting portraits in oval.
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Provenance

Ralph Verney (1714 – 1791), 2nd Earl of Verney, Claydon House, near Winslow, Buckinghamshire; thence by descent

Christie’s, London, 22 April 1977, lot 98;

De Vos, Ghent, 10 December 1979, lot 92;

Sotheby’s, London, 7 July 1982, lot 23;

Private collection, Belgravia, London; their sale

Christie’s, London, 26 October 2011, lot 1019; where acquired by

The Weiss Gallery, London; until 2015, when acquired by
Private collection, United States of America.

Literature

Advert, Arts. Antiques. Auctions, December 1979, 92, p. 16, illus.

The Weiss Gallery, The Captured Eye, London 2013, no. 8.

The difference between our portrait and the one at Claydon House lies in the women’s jewellery and their faces.[1] In ours, Johnson’s softly blended sfumato brush-work creates an almost translucent surface to her skin, giving the sitter’s face a vivid realism. The connection, if any, between the two women remains unknown, lost over time. Alternatively, the visual similarities may reveal Johnson’s artistic practise – he may possibly have had a ‘stock’ set of painted costumes for his sitters to choose from for their idealised representation. Certainly, many of Johnson’s portraits from this period present his sitters in similar black and white costumes. Aileen Ribeiro has noted this combination brings to mind the contemporary romantic conceit of ‘Night and Day’, or ‘Melancholy and Joy’.


Johnson was born in London, the son of Flemish émigrés whose family originated from Cologne. His parents were part of the great influx of Protestants from the Netherlands who fled religious persecution following the Spanish conquest of Flanders and the fall of Antwerp. It has been speculated that he may have trained in the Netherlands with Michiel Jansz. van Miereveld.[2] Indeed, our portrait has a smooth and precise finish that is reminiscent of that artist. It may well be that Johnson also studied in London under Marcus Gheeraerts. Not only do his first signed and dated works such as this use a form of inscription similar to that of Gheeraerts, but stylistically they continue the Jacobean traditions encapsulated in that artist’s oeuvre. Johnson’s art was suited to the relative intimacy of the bust-length portrait where, with a certain detachment, he captured the reticence of the English landed gentry and minor aristocracy.[3]



[1] Our unknown lady wears a more complex cruciform diamond pendant, and a simpler pearl-drop earring.

[2] K. Hearn, ‘The English Career of Cornelius Johnson’, Dutch and Flemish Artists in Britain 1550 - 1700, Leiden, 2003, ed. E. Domela et al., pp.113-128.

[3] His success was such that in December 1632 Johnson was appointed as ‘his Majesty’s servant in ye quality of Picture Drawer’. However, the arrival of Van Dyck evidently had a major impact on his patronage. Although Johnson was still among the King’s ‘servants in ordinary of the chamber’ in 1641, as described by Vertue, he ‘Stayd in England till the Troublesom civil war… being terrifyd with those apprehensions & the constant persuasions of his wife went to Holland’. Thus he and his family left for Holland in October 1643, where he continued to paint into his final years, dying in Utrecht in 1661.

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