Circa 1750 England

Follower of Sir William Segar, 18th Century Portrait of Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester

£8,750

SOLD

Height 27 1/2 inches (70 cm)
Width 24 inches (61 cm)
Depth 1 1/2 inches (3.75 cm)

Follower of Sir William Segar, eighteenth century

Portrait of Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester (1532-1588)

Oil on wood panel; in parcel gilded ebonised frame.

Dimensions refer to outer framed size.

Provenance: By descent in the Gresley family of Drakelow Hall, Derbyshire, until sold by Sir Robert Gresley 11th Bt., July 1931; purchased by Gerald Poynton Mander (1885-1951) until sold probably Sotheby’s July 1954 where purchased by Harold Sydney Roundal; Private Collection, England

The sitter was the 5th son of John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland (1502-1553). A great favourite of Queen Elizabeth I, he was made both a Knight of the Garter and a Privy Councillor, but failed in his attempts to obtain the Queen’s hand in marriage. He was twice married, first, in 1550, to Amye Robsart, who died in mysterious circumstances, and second, in 1578, to Lettice Knollys, widow of Walter Devereux, Earl of Essex. Despite setbacks with the Queen he ultimately held on to his court position and was given control of the armies at the Battle of the Armarda in 1588 shortly before his death.

The portrait presented here relates to the portrait type of c. 1587, by William Segar, of which the prime version is in a private collection but used to be at Leicester House and then the Lumley Collection c.1590 (for which see E. Goldring Robert Dudley Earl of Leicester and the World of Elizabethan Art, Paul Mellon Yale, 2014, p.11). It was a type that was to be the basic image of the Earl that was used by many different painters at the time and later. The Gresley Baronets were related through marriage to the Duke of Northumberland and Robert Dudley and therefore this version was probably painted to emphasise that historic link; given the nature of the wooden panel used and the manner of the painted finish, it probably dates to the eighteenth century.

Reference: 2338 Categories: ,
Share this item on