Portraits of King Michael I and Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha of Austria by court painters
In 1668, King John II Casimir Vasa, the last descendant of the Jagiellons on the Polish throne, whose reign was marked by the terrible Deluge (1655-1660), abdicated. After the invasion, the country changed significantly in many ways, including demographically and ethnically. Many regions became depopulated and impoverished. Foreigners have ceased to be a dominant power in many cities and the time of the "compatriot king" has come. On June 19, 1669, Michael I Korybut, a member of the Ruthenian Vyshnevetsky (Wiśniowiecki) family, was elected king. To emphasize his Ruthenian origins, the king was even represented in a costume typical of Ruthenian princes in a print by Nicolas de Larmessin I (National Library of Poland, G.45499).
However, in many respects the situation remained the same as before, especially with regard to portraiture, art and luxury goods imported from other countries. The magnificent almost one meter high silver white eagle of Poland - heraldic base for the royal crown, was probably made in Augsburg for the king's coronation on September 29, 1669. The eagle was created by Abraham I or Abraham II Drentwett and Heinrich Mannlich and was given to Alexis of Russia in 1671 as a diplomatic gift to prevent another war (today in the Moscow Kremlin, Armory, MZ 191). In the Hermitage Museum there is a silver-gilt basin with Titanomachy and inscription in Polish IEREMI MICHAL KORIBUTH XIAZE NA WISNIOWIV Y LUBNIACH (Э-8767). This beautiful basin was created by Elias I Drentwett in the 1630s, also in Augsburg, most likely for the king's father Jeremi Wiśniowiecki (Yarema Vyshnevetsky, 1612-1651). The king also ordered from Gdańsk the silver service consisting of 258 vessels with a total weight of 1,129 grzywnas for the grand sum of 33,618.06 florins (with cases and material for lining). Portraits during this period were less frequently commissioned from abroad, perhaps because workshops there were too expensive or since the "compatriot kings" were not related familially to the monarchs of Europe, like the Jagiellons and the Vasas, there was no need to send many updated effigies to relatives. There were also more and more prominent native painters. It was probably shortly after the coronation that the series of magnificent portraits of the king by the court painter Daniel Schultz was created, including the full-length portrait at Wawel Castle (1423), purchased in 1936 by the Polish Academy of Arts and Sciences in Kraków and coming from the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, the portrait was therefore most likely a gift to the Habsburgs. A reduced version, painted in the same style (especially the armor) is in the Wilanów Palace (oil on canvas, 83 x 68, Wil.1158). Other royal and ducal courts in Europe must also have received the king's portraits. Such long-forgotten effigies of the Polish-Lithuanian monarch can be found today in the National Gallery of Denmark in Copenhagen ("Portrait of a man", dated 1791-1890, oil on canvas, 47.5 x 38 cm, KMS1416), probably from the Danish royal collection, and the Pitti Palace in Florence, which brings together the Medici collections, therefore very probably a gift for the Grand Dukes of Tuscany ("Portrait of a man", dated 1690-1710 and "stylistically similar to 17th century French painting", oil on canvas, 43 x 33 cm, Inv. 1890, 5269). Both resemble the effigy of the king from a print by Wolfgang Philipp Kilian, published in 1692 (Royal Castle in Warsaw, ZKW/4322). The absence of the Order of the Golden Fleece, which he received on October 6, 1669 from the hands of the Spanish envoy of King Charles II of Spain during the session of the Sejm, in the two last potraits, indicates that they were probably created between June and October of that year. On February 27, 1670, Michael I married Austrian Archduchess Eleonora Maria Josepha (1653-1697), daughter of Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor, by his third wife Eleonora Gonzaga (niece of the former Queen of Poland Marie Louise Gonzaga). The ceremony was celebrated by the Apostolic Nuncio, Cardinal Galeazzo Marescotti, at the Jasna Góra Monastery. The large full-length portrait of the queen holding flowers, which was housed before the Second World War in the Zamoyski Palace in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 215 x 131 cm, lost or destroyed), was also attributed to Schultz. This painting was probably created shortly after the wedding and coronation on September 29, 1670 in Warsaw. Due to the great opposition to the Habsburg marriage, the king and his wife wanted to refer to the origins of the multicultural monarchy in Poland-Lithuania. Michael ordered to take the jewels of Queen Hedwig of Anjou (Saint Jadwiga, 1373/1374-1399) from the Kraków Academy, "so that he could use them as gifts for his fiancée, Queen Eleonora, but when it was found that there were not as many of them as needed and their shape was not was proper, they were returned by King Michael", testifies under the year 1670 Stanisław Józef Bieżanowski (1628-1693) (after "Rocznik krakowski", Volume 38, p. 16). What is interesting is that there is a portrait of Queen Hedwig from the 1670s at the Academy (Collegium Maius). Along with a portrait of her husband Jogaila of Lithuania, it was painted in Kraków by the painter of the Polish court, trained in Paris and Antwerp, Jan Tricius (also Trycjusz or Tretko). The portrait of Jogaila is imaginative and was signed at the bottom: Jan Tricius pinxit Cracoviae. The portrait of Hedwig is not signed, while other paintings from this series were also dated 1677 and 1678 (portraits of Piotr Tylicki and Jerzy Lubomirski), including the portrait of King John III Sobieski (Jan Tricius pinxit Cracoviae A. 1677). Thus, the portrait of the queen must also have been painted before 1678. The coat of arms of the Hungarian branch of the House of Anjou is in the upper left corner and the painting is inscribed on the frame: HEDVIGIS REGINA P. The queen wears a medieval-style dress lined with ermine and embroidered with French fleur-de-lis, but her facial features closely resemble those of Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha from her portrait from the Zamoyski collection. Eleonora Maria Josepha's facial features from her portrait holding a tulip, a symbol of affection and marital fidelity (National Museum in Warsaw, MP 4979), are also very similar, as are those from her portrait from around 1690 (private collection), showing her in mourning after the death of her second husband. This portrait can be compared to the portrait of Marie Mancini (1639-1715), niece of Cardinal Mazarin, represented in a medieval-style costume of Armida, fictional character of a Saracen sorceress, painted by Carlo Maratta in 1669 (Palazzo Colonna in Rome). Significant inflences of women in Poland dates at least to the times of Queen Hedwig, who was elected to the throne of Poland by the aristocracy assembled at Radomsko in 1382, and her grandmother Elizabeth of Poland (1305-1380), Queen of Hungary, who was Regent of Poland between 1370-1380. The fact that Jogaila does not present any characteristics of King Michael indicates that the queen's likeness or its original, copied by Tricius, was made after his death, therefore during the royal election. If this disguised portrait was a political allegory and was ordered by the queen or her supporters, such a clear reference to the first elected queen confirms that she also wished to be elected. Some of the queen's supporters also demanded that the candidate for the throne should marry her. King Michael died on November 10, 1673, and Eleonora Maria Josepha remained in Poland for almost two years after his death, mainly in Toruń. After the election of John III Sobieski, in the spring of 1675 the queen left Poland for Vienna and on February 4, 1678 in Wiener Neustadt, she married Duke Charles V of Lorraine. Since the Duchy of Lorraine was under French occupation, the couple resided in Innsbruck, in Tyrol. After her departure for Austria, Eleonora Maria Josepha was still very involved in Polish politics and there were fears in Poland that she was planning to overthrow King John III and install her own spouse as king. In several of her portraits from this period, she poses with the royal crown of Poland, such as that purchased by the Wawel Royal Castle in Paris in 2008. The author of the Wawel painting was most likely Charles Herbel (1656-1703), court painter to the Duke of Lorraine because it closely resembles the one represented in a print made by Elias Hainzelmann in Augsburg after a painting by Herbel (Austrian National Library, 47539, signed: C. Herbel pingebat.). A similar portrait from the collection of the artist and cabinetmaker Mario Villa (1953-2021), attributed to the school of Pierre Mignard, was sold in 2022 in New Orleans as "Portrait of a Queen" (oil on canvas, 121.29 x 85.41 cm, Neal Auction Company, May 12, 2022, lot 28).
Portrait of King Michael I (1640-1673), holding a baton by Daniel Schultz or workshop, ca. 1669-1673, Wilanów Palace in Warsaw.
Portrait of King Michael I (1640-1673) by workshop of Daniel Schultz, ca. 1669, Pitti Palace in Florence.
Portrait of King Michael I (1640-1673) by workshop of Daniel Schultz, ca. 1669, National Gallery of Denmark.
Portrait of Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha of Austria (1653-1697), holding flowers by Daniel Schultz, ca. 1670, Zamoyski Palace in Warsaw, lost.
Portrait of Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha of Austria (1653-1697) in guise of Queen Hedwig of Anjou (Saint Jadwiga, 1373/1374-1399) by Jan Tricius, ca. 1673-1678, Jagiellonian University Museum.
Portrait of Eleonora Maria Josepha of Austria (1653-1697), Duchess of Lorraine with Polish regalia by Charles Herbel, ca. 1678-1683, Wawel Royal Castle.
Portrait of Eleonora Maria Josepha of Austria (1653-1697), Duchess of Lorraine with Polish regalia by Charles Herbel, ca. 1678-1683, Private collection.
Portrait of Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha of Austria by Gonzales Coques
Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha of Austria (1653-1697), was a great lover of Italian theater and ballet. Her courtiers were mainly Italians, and the queen herself used this language in her everyday life (after "Warszawa w latach 1526-1795" by Maria Bogucka, p. 233). On Shrovetide 1671 Eleonora's courtiers performed the tragedy by Giacinto Andrea Cicognini entitled La caduta del gran capitan Belissario ... (published in Rome in 1663), on May 31, 1671 a comedy translated from the Spanish about Queen Morilinda (Komedyja o Morylindzie królowej), interwoven with vocal and dance intermedia, was performed on the occasion of queen's birthday and the next day, the queen staged a beautiful ballet in the garden of the Casimir Palace (Villa Regia), danced by her ladies-in-waiting.
Although not confirmed in the sources, the queen must also have participated in some of these splendid entertainments. Around 1667, her half-brother Emperor Leopold I (1640-1705) and his wife the Spanish Infanta Margaret Theresa (1651-1673) were represented in stage costumes, most probably for the play La Galatea (as Acis and Galatea), which was performed in 1667 in Vienna as part of the wedding festivities which lasted almost two years. These two small pendant portraits, attributed to the Flemish painter Jan Thomas van Ieperen, are today in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna (oil on copper, 33.3 x 24.2 cm, GG 9135 and GG 9136). Van Ieperen, a student of Rubens, probably also painted the portrait of Leopold I on horseback in a costume for a "horse-ballet" (ballet à cheval), which until 1957 was in the collection of the National Museum in Warsaw as a deposit of Janusz Radziwiłł (oil on canvas, 56 x 46 cm). According to family tradition, this painting was considered to be an equestrian portrait of Henry of Valois, king of Poland then king of France under the name of Henry III. This painting was probably a counterpart to the portrait of Gundakar (1623-1690), prince of Dietrichstein, dated around 1667 (Kunsthistorisches Museum, oil on canvas, 60.5 x 49.5 cm, GG 9676), but we cannot cannot exclude that it was a gift for King John II Casimir Vasa with whom the effigy was also identified. The equestrian ballet was one of the elaborate festivities held at the Viennese court in 1667. When the Polish queen, Marie Louise Gonzaga, died that same year, Emperor Leopold proposed to his widowed relative John Casimir one of three archduchesses or his own stepmother (Eleonora Maria Josepha's mother) as his wife. On the occasion of the Empress's birthday, the opera Il Pomo d'oro ("The Golden Apple") by Antonio Cesti was performed on July 12 and 13, 1668. A specially constructed open-air theatre was built for this festa teatrale. The emperor himself, who set two scenes to music, was involved. For this opulent opera, Lodovico Ottavio Burnacini created 23 different stage sets that captivated the audience. Il Pomo d'oro became known in Europe thanks to the prints by Matthäus Küsel and Frans Geffels based on Burnacini's drawings. The opera was undoubtedly seen by Leopold's half-sister, Eleonora Maria Josepha, who two years later became Queen of Poland. Interestingly, a beautiful silver tray with a scene from the opera Il Pomo d'oro, created by Hans Polmann in Gdańsk (active 1626-1686), is found in the treasury of Tarnów Cathedral (deposited in the Wawel Royal Castle). In 2016, a "Portrait of a noblewoman, said to be Maria Leszczynska" was sold in London (oil on copper, 42.9 x 28.4 cm, Bonhams, July 20, 2016, lot 104). Due to the traditional identification and attribution to Franz Christoph Janneck (1703-1761), an Austrian painter in the Baroque style, specializing in genre scenes, which was also written on the frame ("MARIE LECZINSKI, d. 1767. / daughter of Stanislaus King of Poland. / married Louis XV, 1723. 1703. F.C. JANNECK. 1761."), the painting was sold with an attribution to the German school, around 1700. However, the model's costume and hairstyle indicate that the painting is before 1700. The author of the blog Pospiszil87 (June 24, 2016), also noticed the great resemblance with the effigies of Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha, wife of Michael I. Her dress, pose and facial features are particularly similar to the portrait of the queen in a white dress from Wilanów Palace (Wil.1156), most likely created shortly after her coronation in 1670. The sitter also resembles Eleonora Maria Josepha from her portrait in a golden dress, attributed to Benjamin Block at the Kunsthistorisches Museum (GG 2106), correctly identified by the author of the webiste altesses.eu. Block's portrait was probably made shortly before her departure for Poland and was reproduced in an engraving bearing the inscription: Coecilia Renata / Königin in Pohlen (National Museum in Kraków, MNK III-ryc.-44614). Probably due to the similarity with this print, another portrait of Eleonora Maria Josepha, now at Rychnov nad Kněžnou Castle (č. RK 19/69), was considered to depict Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria, correctly identified by me in 2011. The model's face also resembles the portrait of the queen by Charles Brendel, signed and dated: Ch. Brendel 1684 (Kunsthistorisches Museum, GG 2750) and anonymous engraving in the Herzog August library in Wolfenbüttel (A 16720). The shorter dress from the London portrait, than in all the portraits mentioned, indicates that it was designed to facilitate dancing. Its decoration is also more theatrical and recalls the dancers' costumes reproduced in an engraving representing a scene from Il Pomo d'oro of 1668 (Metropolitan Museum of Art, 53.600.3541). Her early 1670s hairstyle and turban-shaped headpiece alla turca indicate that she could have posed as a character in La caduta del gran capitan Belissario ..., staged in Warsaw in 1671, perhaps as Byzantine Empress Theodora (wife of Justinian I), one of the main characters in this play. The play was the dramatized story of the Byzantine leader who was blinded at the end of his life on the orders of the Emperor Justinian. It is interesting to note that public opinion saw in the performance of this play political allusions to the person of the leader of the opposition, Primate Mikołaj Prażmowski (1617-1673), who could only see in one eye and was therefore called a blind man or a cyclops by the court party. The portrait is comparable to the effigies of Sophie Amalie of Brunswick-Calenberg (1628-1685), queen of Denmark and Norway in stage costume from around 1655, painted by Wolfgang Heimbach (Rosenborg Castle and Frederiksborg Castle) and in particular to the portraits of Louis XIV of France and his mistress Louise de La Vallière in Polish-style masquerade costumes, painted by Joseph Werner (Norton Simon Museum, M.2010.1.189.P, M.2010.1.190.P). According to the letter from the Prince of Condé to Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga, dated February 29, 1664, a great Polish-style masquerade took place at the court of Louis XIV of France: "The masquerade was held this Tuesday, it was the most beautiful and the most magnificent in the world. (...) The King was dressed in Polish style; this outfit suited him extremely well, and everyone found it very beautiful" (La mascarade se fit mardi, elle fut la plus belle et la plus magnifique du mondé. (...) Le Roi était vêtu à la polonaise; cet habit-là lui seyait extrêmement bien, et tout le monde l'a trouvé fort beau). The king was represented in blue clothing inspired by the Polish żupan, wearing a fur hat similar to kolpak and holding a nadziak war hammer and his mistress in yellow jupeczka (female fur clothing). His 3-year-old son Louis, Grand Dauphin, was also depicted in a costume similar to żupan in a painting in the Prado Museum (P002291). A few years after the destructive Deluge, the Commonwealth was a shadow of its former glory. However, the stock of looted objects and clothing of the Polish-Lithuanian nobility and luxury horse tacks adorned with silver and jewels was apparently so large in Sweden that parades in these "exotic" outfits were held in the capital of the Swedish Empire. When the Commonwealth attempted to rebuild the crumbling economy after the invasion and five years of plunder and destruction, the invaders also began spending their dubious "economic surplus" on luxury goods abroad. For example a collection of engravings published after 1672 in Nuremberg (Certamen equestre caeteraque solemnia Holmiae Suecorum ..., National Library of France, BnF FRBNF44335264) shows a parade in Stockholm in December 1672 celebrating the accession to the throne of King Charles XI. Swedish aristocrats, including Count Bengt Oxenstierna (1623-1702), who during the invasion became governor of the newly conquered Duchy of Lithuania, Steenbock, Gyllenstierna, Reutercrantz and others and their retinues, parade in the obviously looted garments of the Commonwealth's nobles (pages 38-49). Although the style and format of the London portrait is reminiscent of Jan Thomas van Ieperen's portrait of the queen's half-brother and his wife in stage costumes, it is closer to that of the most eminent painter of the cabinet paintings, that were popular in the Baroque age - Gonzales Coques (d. 1684), possibly a pupil of Anthony van Dyck, called "the little van Dyck" (de kleine van Dyck). The style of the portrait of the queen's uncle, Archduke Leopold William of Austria (1614-1662) by Coques, painted before 1659 (Kunsthistorisches Museum, GG 5461), is particularly similar. The style of the painting also resembles another portrait from the same period, attributed to Coques. This "Portrait of an elegant lady" was sold in Vienna in 2017 (oil on copper, 30.6 x 22.2 cm, Dorotheum, October 17, 2017, lot 264). The sitter's hairstyle and costume are also in the same style as the queen's effigy. On the left is an indistinct inscription in Italian, written by the woman on the tree, which reads: "Whoever wanted ... freedom for his life in his homeland" (Chi voll … liberta sua vita a patria). Previously, this portrait had been sold in London (Bonhams, April 6, 2017, lot 110) with attribution to the French School. The woman closely resembles Mary Elizabeth Browne, Lady Teynham (d. after 1686), based on her portrait by John Michael Wright, painted in 1672 (Sotheby's London, April 30, 2014, lot 765). Coques, who worked for foreign clients, also painted the French Queen Maria Theresa of Spain (1638-1683), a distant relative of Eleonora Maria Josepha. This small oval miniature from a private collection in Paris, signed on the reverse: Gonzales Corques, was put on sale in January 2024 with identification as Mary, Princess Royal (1631-1660), eldest daughter of King Charles I of England (oil on copper, 8.1 x 6.6 cm, Boris Wilnitsky Fine Arts in Vienna, 37731). The effigy is similar to queen's portrait at Versailles (MV 3501) or the engraving by Nicolas Pitau, dated 1662. It should also be noted that the print with the effigy of Eleonora Maria Josepha by Nicolas de Larmessin, made in Paris after 1670, representing the Queen of Poland in a Ruthenian-style fur coat, resembles the effigies of the Queen of France (National Library of Poland, G.45500).
Portrait of Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha of Austria (1653-1697) in stage costume by Gonzales Coques, ca. 1670-1671, Private collection.
Portrait of Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha of Austria by workshop of Louis Ferdinand Elle the Elder
The painting entitled "In the artist's studio" kept in the National Museum in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 76 x 89 cm, M.Ob.1991 MNW) shows the importance of initial study drawings on all stages of the work. A couple of wealthy patrons in costumes from the early 1700s consult the drawing they received and accepted with the final work in the sculptor's workshop, whose assistant makes the modifications requested by the clients. The drawing is held by the wife, who probably ordered the carved vase and she shows it to her husband dressed in a costume of a Polish-Lithuanian nobleman and accompanied by servants wearing kolpak fur hats.
This painting is attributed to the Austrian painter Johann Georg Platzer (1704-1761), but a similar work entitled "In the studio of the court painter" (oil on canvas, 78 x 89 cm, Dorotheum Vienna, September 26, 2017, lot 156) was sold with attribution to the Flemish painters Gerard Thomas (1663-1721) or circle of Balthasar van den Bossche (1681-1715), both active in Antwerp. Both of them must have seen many wealthy Sarmatians visiting Antwerp and commissioning magnificent works from local workshops, as they immortalized them in many of their genre scenes, such as the Sculptors' workshop with a client from the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth by Gerard Thomas (Royal Museum of Fine Arts in Antwerp, 783) and a comparable painting by Balthasar van den Bossche (Alte Pinakothek in Munich, 2219). Self-portrait copying the portrait of Vittoria della Rovere (1622-1694), Grand Duchess of Tuscany by Camilla Guerrieri (oil on majolica, 14.2 x 16.7 cm, Altomani & Sons), painted around 1658-1662, shows the importance of the copies made from other paintings, as well as the fact that important dignitaries did not spend hours posing for such paintings, but relied on such copies by their court painters. Portrait of Vittoria della Rovere in black dress with lace collar and diamond brooch by Justus Sustermans at the Hamburger Kunsthalle in Hamburg (inv. 766) and a painting close to the style of Camilla Guerrieri (Chiswick Auctions in London, January 31, 2018, lot 46) are two such versions of the same portrait, which differ in several details. Skilled painters could also create things different from what they actually were and meet the different demands of their clients. They could "beautify" them, make their features more harmonious or change the color of the hair. In several of her portraits, Maria Anna of Austria (1610-1665), Electress of Bavaria, sister of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria (1611-1644), wears in her hair a heavy jewel with a large ruby or garnet. In her portrait from Dachau Castle (Alte Pinakothek Munich, 3093), the jewel is larger than an eye, while in the portrait she most likely sent to her relatives in Florence (Palazzo Pitti in Florence, inv. 1890 / 5261), it is much larger, almost the size of an egg, as if electress wanted to make them envious. Although less than in previous eras, the "compatriot kings" also ordered their effigies abroad. Around 1677, the "Victorious King" John III Sobieski commissioned a series of his portraits from the workshop of a Flemish painter Prosper Henricus Lankrink (1628-1692) or another painter, several copies of which survived, notably in the Wawel Castle (inv. 1781), Forchtenstein Castle in Austria (B 622) and the painting from the Former Polish Museum in Muri (MPM 0541). A pen and ink sketch, kept in the Print Cabinet of the Warsaw University Library, was most likely the initial study drawing sent to Lankrink in Antwerp or in London, where he collaborated with Peter Lely. The drawing was sold after his death in 1692 and later acquired by the last elected monarch of the Commonwealth Stanislaus Augustus Poniatowski (1732-1798). It features notes in Dutch/Flemish with colors and fabrics, made to facilitate a painter's work. This is undoubtedly a sketch made from nature, as evidenced by the last fragment of the text: "... in this outfit he [the king] is also obese" (after "Sobiesciana ..." by Maria Cubrzyńska-Leonarczyk, p. 40). Some of these paintings were undoubtedly also intended for diplomatic gifts and the orders in Antwerp facilitated the distribution of these effigies throughout Europe. From there they could be easily shipped to Madrid, Paris, Rome and London. The "compatriot kings" also received such gifts from abroad and the portrait of the regent of Spain, Queen Mariana of Austria (1634-1696), who was also the ruler of the Spanish Netherlands, today preserved in the National Museum in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 123 x 97.5 cm, 42503 MNW), could be such a gift. This painting comes from the Morzycki Gallery in Ruszkowo near Konin and was donated by Maria Morzycka to the Warsaw Museum in 1922. It is a version of portrait by Juan Carreño de Miranda, now kept in the Prado Museum in Madrid (P000644), representing the queen in the habit of a nun and seated in the Hall of Mirrors of the Alcazar of Madrid. The original is dated around 1669 or 1670, so the copy could be a gift for King Michael I and his Habsburg wife Eleonora Maria Josepha of Austria (1653-1697), half-sister of the Queen of Spain, as daughters of Emperor Ferdinand III. It should also be noted that there are no apparent attributes, characteristics indicating that the woman in the painting is the monarch of one of the greatest empires in history. There is no crown, no elaborate costume. At first glance, it could be seen as a "Portrait of a nun writing a letter". Another gift for the elected monarchs of the Commonwealth was most likely another portrait kept in the National Museum in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 55 x 50 cm, MP 5274 MNW), later in the Krosnowski collection (State Art Collections of Warsaw, inv. 94). It is said to depict Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga (1611-1667), but it is an almost exact copy of the portrait of Anne of Austria (1601-1666), Queen of France, painted by Pierre Mignard and reproduced in a engraving by Robert Nanteuil in 1660 (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, RP-P-1948-37), correctly identified by me in 2013. The French lilies on her mantle also indicate that it is an effigy of the Queen of France, many of whose portraits were in the royal and magnate collections of the Commonwealth. The portraits of Anne, cousin of kings Ladislaus IV and John Casimir and relative of Queen Cecilia Renata and Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha, are mentioned in the 1661 inventory of the Lubomirski collection in Wiśnicz (Królowa Francuzka Matka), in the 1667 inventory of the possessions of King John II Casimir and most probably mentioned in the 1696 inventory of the Wilanów Palace (no. 37), or a likeness of her daughter-in-law and relative Maria Theresa of Spain, as well as in the 1671 inventory of the Radziwll collection (311/20, Reine de France). The portrait of the Queen of France is a copy of Mignard's painting, however its style more closely resembles the paintings signed and attributed to Louis Ferdinand Elle the Elder (1612-1689), son of the Flemish painter Ferdinand Elle (died in 1637), who settled in France, notably presumed portrait of Marguerite Hessein, dame de La Sablière (1636-1693), as Diana the Huntress (Osenat in Fontainebleau, November 23, 2019, lot 41), signed and dated on the reverse of the canvas: FAIT PAR FERDINAND LAISNE 1655. Another portrait painted in a similar style, although less refined, which could indicate the work of students in his studio, was sold in 2009 in Genoa (oil on canvas, 75 x 58 cm, Cambi Casa d'Aste, May 29 2009, lot 2000), as a "Portrait of a woman" (Ritratto femminile), attributed to the German school of the 17th century. The woman in this portrait bears a striking resemblance to the effigies of Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha, notably to her lost full-length portrait with blonde hair (Zamoyski Palace in Warsaw) and anonymous engraving with Latin inscription: SERENISSIMA PRINCEPS D.D. / ELEONORA D.G. REGINA POLO/NIÆ ARCHIDVX AVSTRIÆ etc. (Herzog August Library in Wolfenbüttel, A 16720). The resemblance to another print with queen's portrait, made by Hans Ulrich Franck (Austrian National Library), particularly with regard to her hairstyle and composition of the painting, is also great. Her hairstyle resembles that in a portrait of Claudia Felicitas of Austria (1653-1676), second wife of Eleonora Maria Josepha's half-brother, depicted blonde and painted around 1672. In the majority of her known portraits, Claudia Felicitas has dark hair, meaning she dyed her hair or wore a wig. This hairstyle was probably introduced to France and throughout Europe by Eleonora Maria Josepha's distant relative, Maria Theresa of Spain, wife of Louis XIV, and was inspired by the large Spanish wigs of the 1650s. It was not only fashionable to dress in the manner of the French court, but also to be painted by the court painters of the Sun King. The portrait of the Queen of Poland was therefore commissioned in Paris and eventually sent from there to Italy. The oldest known effigy of Eleonora Maria Josepha is a portrait in the Pardo Museum in Madrid (P002228), which was sent to her Spanish relatives and which depicts her at the age of around 2 years old around 1655.
Portrait of Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha of Austria (1653-1697) by workshop of Louis Ferdinand Elle the Elder, ca. 1670-1673, Private collection.
Portrait of Anne of Austria (1601-1666), Queen of France by Louis Ferdinand Elle the Elder or workshop, ca. 1660-1666, National Museum in Warsaw.
Portrait of Mariana of Austria (1634-1696), Queen of Spain by follower of Juan Carreño de Miranda, ca. 1670, National Museum in Warsaw.
Portraits of Helena Tekla Lubomirska by Pierre Mignard I and Nicolas de Plattemontagne
In 1893, Henryk Bukowski, an antiques dealer active in Stockholm, who bought Polonica from Sweden seized from the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth during the Deluge (1655-1660) and the Great Northern War (1700-1721), donated a painting to the Polish Museum in Rapperswil in Switzerland, known in later catalogs as portrait of Princess Lubomirska by Mignard. The museum founded in 1870 preserved the memorabilia of the country which, at that time, did not exist on the maps of Europe, destroyed by imperialist neighbors. In 1929, when Poland regained its independence (1918), the painting, along with many others, was transferred to the National Museum in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 72 x 59 cm, M.Ob.1253, earlier 34182). It survived the looting and destruction during the Second World War, unlike the Madonna and Child by the Master of the Legend of the Magdalene (34169) or the portrait of Crown Prince Ladislaus Sigismund Vasa, copy after Rubens' original.
The portrait of Princess Lubomirska was inscribed on the back: Capitane Lubomirski / par Nic. Mignard. In 1975, Wanda Drecka identified the model as Helena Tekla Ossolińska (1622-1687), wife of Aleksander Michał Lubomirski (1614-1677), starost (capitaneus) of Sandomierz (compare "Dwa portrety księżnej na Wiśniczu", p. 373-387). She was part of the close circle of Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga and exercised great influence at court. The French envoy Antoine de Lumbres described her as "mischievous" in a letter to Louis XIV of February 26, 1655 (et l'autre qui est beaucoup plus fine et malicieuse est la femme du grand écuyer). As a relative of John III through her mother, she often appears in the king's correspondence with his wife, where Sobieski calls her his sister (à ma sœur) or madame la starostine de Sandomir (for example letter dated October 15, 1683 near Esztergom/Strygonium). The great resemblance of the sitter to other preserved effigies of capitane/starostine Lubomirska, as well as the fact that many of her portraits were created in France confirm this identification. The "Inventory of belongings spared from Swedes and escapes made on December 1, 1661 in Wiśnicz" (Rejestr rzeczy po Szwedach i ucieczkach zostających spisany roku 1661 dnia 1 grudnia na Wiśniczu) in the Central Archives of Historical Records in Warsaw (number 1/357/0/-/7/12), lists numerous portraits from the Lubomirski collection that survived the Deluge. In addition to a portrait of Helena Tekla in the guise of Saint Helena and a full-length portrait in the guise of Diana with greyhounds by Simon Vouet and workshop, made in Paris, allegorical portrait of Louis XIII and Cardinal Richelieu, it also includes "a portrait of the king of France, a small miniature on parchment which was in the jewel" (Konterfek Króla Francuzkiego malusienki Miniatura na pargaminie ktory był wkleinocie), as well as "a portrait of a seated young king of France (Konterfet Krola Francuzkiego młodego siedzącego), perhaps a version of a portrait of Louis XIV by Justus van Egmont kept in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna (GG 3208). The portrait of the French monarch is followed by a series of portraits of European monarchs, which perhaps also reflect the hierarchy of political relations of the Lubomirski family for whom the elected monarchs of the Commonewath were only "first among equals" (primus inter pares) - portrait of Pope Urban VIII (Vrbanus VIII), perhaps a copy of the effigy by Pietro da Cortona (Capitoline Museums, PC 153) and portrait of Innocent X (Innocentius X), perhaps a copy of his famous portrait by Diego Velázquez (Doria Pamphilj Gallery, FC 289), Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand of Austria (Kardinal Infante), Cardinal Mazarin (Kardinal Madziaryni), Cardinal Orsini (Kardinal Ursyni), Prince-Bishop Charles Ferdinand Vasa (Krolewicz Karol), King Ladislaus IV Vasa (Król władislaw), King John II Casimir in national costume (Król Kazimierz popolsku), Francesco Molin (1575-1655), doge of Venice (Xiąze wenecki Molini), Ferdinand II de' Medici (1610-1670), Grand Duke of Tuscany (Xiaze Florenski), Francesco I d'Este (1610-1658), duke of Modena (Xiaze Modinski), duke of Mantua (Xiaze Mantuanski), Ranuccio II Farnese (1630-1694), duke of Parma (Xiaze Parmenski) and his brother Alessandro Farnese (1635-1689) (Xiaze brat iego), Philip William of Neuburg (1615-1690), Count Palatine of Neuburg (Xiaze Nayburski), Henry II of Bourbon (1588-1646), prince of Condé (Princeps de Condé stary) and Louis II of Bourbon (1621-1686), prince of Condé (Princeps de Condé Młodszy), Ottavio Piccolomini (1599-1656), duke of Amalfi (Xiąze Pikolomini), Stanisław Koniecpolski (1591-1646), castellan of Kraków (Pan Krakowski Koniecpolski), Jakub Sobieski (1590-1646), castellan of Kraków (Pan Krakowski Sobieski), Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria (Królowa Cecylia), Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga (Krolowa Ludowika Marya), Anne of Austria (1601-1666), queen of France (Krolowa Francuzka Matka), Anne Marie Louise of Orléans (1627-1693), known as La Grande Mademoiselle (Mademosil, abo xiezna De'orléans, starsza), Isabella Clara of Austria (1629 -1685), duchess of Mantua (Madama Mantuanska), Olimpia Aldobrandini (1623-1681), princessa di Rossano (Principessa de Rosanno), Olimpia Maidalchini Pamphilj (1591-1657), sister-in-law of Pope Innocent X (Donna olimpia) and others. This gallery reflects the state of European and local politics in the era directly preceding the invasion (1645-1655), which is why the Lubomirskis probably sacrificed more obsolete portraits or effigies whose identity has been forgotten, probably by the greatest artists of the Renaissance and early Baroque. The next "Register of all things written in Wiśnicz, January 28, 1678" (Regestr spisanych rzeczy wszystkich na Wiśniczu die 28 Januarii, Anno 1678, National Archives in Kraków, sygn. 201), prepared under the direction of Helena Tekla in relation with the death of her husband, lists "a portrait of Her Ladyship without frames" (Konterfekt Jey M bez Ram) and "a portrait of Her Ladyship from Paris, large on white frames" (Konterfekt Jey M z Paryza wielki na Ramach białych prostych), as well as portraits of the Doge of Venice (Xiązęcia Weneckiego Konterfekt) and the King of France (Konterfekt Krola Francuskiego) and a large Virgin and Child against a landscape received from King John Casimir. Lubomirska also painted, since on page 52 of the inventory we read: "a black box with painting paints of Her Benefactress" (szkatułka czarna z farbami do malowania JM Dobrodz.). Based on the inscription Drecka attributed the painting to the French painter Nicolas Mignard (around 1606-1668) and dated to the time of Lubomirska's marriage in 1637. According to the author, the portrait should be further considered as a historié painting in the guise of Flora, goddess of flowers and spring and in this sense, it is comparable to Rembrandt's painting at the Hermitage, painted in 1634. The style of the portrait is closer to that of Nicholas's brother, Pierre Mignard I (1612-1695), which appeared in the catalog entry of the National Museum in Warsaw (MNW) - the painting was listed as a portrait of a young woman and dated around 1650. The costume and hairstyle indeed postdate the 1630s and even the 1650s and the closest similarities are visible in a portrait of Elizabeth Charlotte of the Palatinate (1652-1722), Duchess of Orléans, holding flowers, at the Prado Museum in Madrid (P002352). The style of the painting is also very similar. The Madrid canvas is attributed to the circle of Pierre Mignard I, which confirms the current attribution by MNW, and it is dated around 1675. Other paintings, by Caspar Netscher, such as the portrait of a woman from 1674 (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, SK-A-1693, signed and dated: C. Netscher fec. 1674), portrait of Helena Catharina de Witte (1661-1695) from 1678 (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, SK-A-707, signed and dated: CNetscher 1678) or portrait of a lady from 1682 (National Museum in Kraków, MNK XII-A-880, signed and dated: C Netscher 1682), confirms that the effigy of Lubomirska must be dated after 1674. Imitating the style of the French Queen Maria Theresa of Spain (1638-1683) (compare the portrait by François de Troy, Museum of Fine Arts of Angers), Helena Tekla was depicted in a fashionable blonde wig. Her appearance is very youthful in this portrait, which was a standard for many effigies (and still is today) and probably no one questions the identity of the so-called Rainbow Portrait of Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603), painted around 1600, only because the Queen of England looks much younger than almost 70 years old. Close to Mignard's style is another disguised portrait of the capitane/starostine Lubomirska, depicted as Pandora "the all-endowed", the first woman created by Hephaestus on the instructions of Zeus (Jove), today in the National Museum in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 111 x 88 cm, 128823 MNW). Dressed in black, Helena Tekla holds a large bronze vase, an urn, bearing the Lubomirski coat of arms - Szreniawa and the inscription in Italian [SP]ENTO E IE [IL] LVME / NON L'ADORE ("the light went out, not the ardor"), which is a paraphrase of a verse from the poem "Adonis" (L'Adone) by Giambattista Marino, published in Paris in 1623 and dedicated to the French king Louis XIII. Wanda Drecka interprets this representation of Princess Lubomirska "as the guardian of all virtues or Pandora who gives everything" and attributes the painting to Claude Callot (d. 1687), court painter trained in Rome. The painting has an inscription at the bottom: Theophilla Com: de Tenczyn Osolińska Alexan. Pr. Lubom.: Pal: Cracov: Consors: and comes from the Potocki collection in Krzeszowice near Kraków. Callot is the purported author of two tondo ceiling paintings for the king's library in Wilanów Palace, painted around 1681 (compare "Claude Callot ..." by Konrad Morawski). His allegory of philosophy and theology is very Roman in style, comparable to the works of Pietro da Cortona and Andrea Sacchi. The portrait of Lubomirska as Pandora and its copy in Wilanów Palace (oil on canvas, 81.5 x 66 cm, Wil.1267), however, recalls works attributed to Mignard, such as the portrait of Louise Renée de Penancoët de Kéroualle (1649-1734), Duchess of Portsmouth, mistress of Charles II of England, as Saint Mary Magdalene (Antichità Castelbarco, Proantic, Reference: 1200976, depicted blonde in this portrait) or portrait of Françoise d'Aubigné (1635-1719), Marquise de Maintenon, mistress of Louis XIV of France, as Saint Frances of Rome (Palace of Versailles, MV 4268). Probably in the second quarter of the 18th century, a rocaille cartouche with an inscription identifying the model was added in the lower left corner of the Wilanów copy. Although possible, Helena Tekla's stay in France is not confirmed in the sources, so it can be assumed that Mignard and his workshop must have relied entirely on study drawings or other effigies sent from Poland-Lithuania. The portrait of Marie Louise of Orléans (1662-1689), Queen of Spain, attributed to Pierre Mignard I, probably commissioned from Spain after her marriage to Charles II in 1679 (Fernando Durán Subastas in Madrid, June 29, 2011, lot 210), proves that the painter and his workshop skillfully created new effigies from paintings or drawings by other painters or earlier portraits. The last known portrait of Helena Tekla is also very French in style. In 1681, around the age of 59, like many French or Italian ladies, she decided to become a nun and entered the convent of the Discalced Carmelites in Lublin, taking the religious name of Paula Maria. She died on May 19, 1687 in Lublin. The portrait, now kept in Wilanów Palace (oil on canvas, 81.5 x 68.5 cm, Wil.1340), is attributed to the Polish school of the 18th century. It bears an inscription in Polish probably added after Lubomirska's death and confirming that she was a great benefactress of the convent, therefore probably offered by her to the Lublin convent during her profession in 1683. Its style recalls the portraits by French painter Philippe de Champaigne, like the portrait of Jean-Baptiste Colbert (1619-1683) from the collection of Princess Izabela Lubomirska (1736-1816) (Metropolitan Museum of Art, 51.34). The most similar, however, are the effigies of figures of French Jansenism - portraits of Mother Jacqueline-Marie-Angélique Arnauld (1591-1661), known as La Mère Angélique, Abbess of the Abbey of Port-Royal (Musée Condé, PE 310, Palace of Versailles, MV 5987 and Musée national de Port-Royal des Champs, DPR-2005-01-016) or portrait of Marie des Anges Suireau (1599-1658), Abbess of the Maubuisson Abbey (Palace of Versailles, MV 5989 ; RF 2494) by Champaigne and his followers. The painter died in 1674, so he could not be the author of the portrait of Lubomirska produced around 1683, but he had some talented students who followed his style, such as Nicolas de Plattemontagne, born Nicolas van Plattenberg (1631-1706) in Antwerp. Wilanów's portrait is very similar in style to the portrait of a man holding a letter, attributed to de Plattemontagne (Christie's Paris, September 15, 2020, lot 57). The painter's stay in Poland-Lithuania is not confirmed in the sources, so he probably created this portrait (or a series) from study drawings or other effigies sent from Lublin. Even though she lived in a convent since 1681, Helena Tekla was still active in the field of patronage, because Stanisław Czerniecki's cookbook "Compendium ferculorum, or a collection of dishes" (Compendium ferculorum, albo zebranie potraw), was published in Kraków in 1682 with a dedication to Princess Lubomirska née Ossolińska. Similar to the portrait as Flora, she was depicted as a young girl. A copy of this portrait by an unknown painter is in the parish church in Klimontów. Not only did French painters work for the Commonwealth's clientele, but also painters of Polish-Lithuanian-Ruthenian origin were active in the French capital, such as the most eminent Alexandre Ubeleski (1649/1651-1718), who belonged to a community painters in the service of Louis XIV. Pierre Mignard is also credited with the authorship of the two pendant oval paintings, now in the Schorr collection in London (oil on canvas, 91.2 x 73.5 cm and 95 x 73 cm), which are identified as depicting John II Casimir Vasa and his morganatic wife Claudine Françoise Mignot (1624-1711), seamstress from Grenoble, whom he secretly married on September 14, 1672, just three months before his death (December 16, 1672). The king wears a crimson silk żupan, a fur-lined coat and a fur kolpak hat and Claudine Françoise a French-style crimson dress lined with fur, inspired by jupeczka. These costumes greatly resemble the clothes of Józef Bogusław Sluszka, ambassador of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in Brussels, and his wife Teresa Korwin Gosiewska from prints made by Henri Bonnart after Robert Bonnart in Paris in 1695 or the outfits of Polish nobles from Description de l'univers by Alain Manesson Mallet - engraving by Pierre Giffart or Pierre Landry, made in Paris in 1683. A similar hat is also visible in the effigy of King John III Sobieski (1629-1696) by Nicolas de Larmessin, made in Paris in 1684. John Casimir was depicted in similar costume in his portrait by Daniel Schultz (Nationalmuseum Stockholm, NMGrh 1273), also reproduced in an engraving by Willem Hondius. Although he appears younger in this portrait than in the effigies preceding his abdication in 1668 and is more stout, the resemblance to his features is undeniable - protruding lower lip inherited from his Habsburg mother and downward-directed eyes, as shown in the octagonal portrait wearing a Ruthenian fur hat (National Museum in Warsaw, 474 MNW) or the portrait in armor from the Musée de Cambrai (MI 643). He looks like a happy retiree and not a tired and sad monarch from the mentioned paintings of Schultz, concerned about the aggressive neighbors of the Commonwealth, ready to plunder and destroy his country, as well as quarrels in Parliament. Given the close relations between France and Poland-Lithuania in the fourth quarter of the 17th century, it is quite possible that the oval portrait of Colbert by Pierre Mignard I, painted between 1677 and 1682, which comes from the collection of the last elected monarch Stanislaus Augustus Poniatowski (Hermitage Museum, ГЭ-561), was sent to the monarchs of the Commonwealth shortly after its creation. Finally, Mignard himself clearly expressed his attachment to customers from Poland-Lithuania by representing himself in a kolpak hat in his self-portrait at the Museum of Fine Arts in Dijon (oil on canvas, 81 x 66 cm, CA 407).
Self-portrait in kolpak hat by Pierre Mignard I, third quarter of the 17th century, Museum of Fine Arts in Dijon.
Portrait of King John II Casimir Vasa (1609-1672) in kolpak hat and portrait of his wife Claudine Françoise Mignot (1624-1711) by Pierre Mignard I, ca. 1672, Schorr collection in London.
Portrait of Helena Tekla Lubomirska née Ossolińska (1622-1687) as Flora by Pierre Mignard I, ca. 1674-1681, National Museum in Warsaw.
Portrait of Helena Tekla Lubomirska née Ossolińska (1622-1687) as Pandora by Pierre Mignard I or workshop, ca. 1667-1677, National Museum in Warsaw.
Portrait of Helena Tekla Lubomirska née Ossolińska (1622-1687) as Pandora by follower of Pierre Mignard I, ca. 1667-1677, Wilanów Palace in Warsaw.
Portrait of Helena Tekla Lubomirska née Ossolińska (1622-1687) as a nun by Nicolas de Plattemontagne, ca. 1683, Wilanów Palace in Warsaw.
Portraits and busts of Katarzyna Sobieska and her husband Michael Casimir Radziwill by Jacob Ferdinand Voet and follower of Bartholomeus Eggers
In September 1655, a huge army of merciless robbers, murderers and rapists calling themselves defenders of the faith and liberators of the oppressed, pillaging and destroying everything in their path, famous for their cruelty and barbarity, approached Warsaw. Panicked residents were leaving the informal capital of one of the European superpowers - the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (probably no country would resist the invasion of several neighboring states).
It was necessary to save not only the most important personal property, but also the most refined works of art, collected over several centuries of peace (excluding borderlands) and great prosperity, created by local artists but also commissioned in Italy, Flanders, the Netherlands, Germany, Persia, Turkey, Russia and received as diplomatic gifts. The royal couple's collections were particularly valuable. John Casimir Vasa was a descendant of the Jagiellons, the Sforzas and the Habsburgs and his wife Marie Louise Gonzaga of the Dukes of Mantua and the Byzantine emperors through her great-grandmother Margaret Palaeologa (1510-1566), Marquise of Montferrat. These names speak for themselves for any connoisseur of European art, which is why this noble descendancy was undoubtedly reflected in the collections of John Casimir and Marie Louise. The tense atmosphere that reigned in the city just before the arrival of the troops of the Brigand of Europe - Charles X Gustav, perfectly reflects the description of the problems associated with the efforts to obtain means of transport by the Discalced Carmelite sisters, who had to flee Lviv in 1648 before the invasion of the Cossacks and Tatars and were invited to Warsaw. Following the example of others and at the queen's instigation, the nuns also wanted to leave the city, but they could not rent carriages: "Carters were also forbidden to be hired by anyone under penalty of death, solely for the needs of the court and the king's belongings". Fortunately, a nobleman returning from Gdańsk by water offered his boat to the sisters. "So, having thanked God, our Reverend Fathers made a trade with this nobleman, they bargained it [the boat] for 200 gold coins and with the raftsmen that he hired; the boat was quite large, because there were three kennels. First for our Reverend Fathers, the second one for us, the third one for the servants, but it was very bad because it was old, rotten, had many holes and large cracks in it, through which water was constantly flowing, so that they could not keep up with pouring it out, and at the same time it was very loaded with heavy burdens, because apart from our things, which were quite a few, His Highness the legate [Pietro Vidoni (1610-1681), Bishop of Lodi, Apostolic Nuncio from Pope Innocent X], unable to get a boat for his belongings, ordered all things to be carried almost by force to our boat. Neither our Reverend Fathers nor we could resist this, even though we begged earnestly that the boat should not be burdened, but the Italians did not listen to anything, they put what they wanted into the boat until it was reloaded, and when our skipper saw that, he shouted: 'For God's sake, what you are doing, you will perish both the nuns, their things, and yourselves', but it did not help". As a result, the sisters sent a significant part of their belongings back to the monastery. The wartime wandering lasted eight years. Through Wiśnicz, the seat of the Lubomirski family, the sisters reached Lubomirski estates in northern Slovakia (Spiš and Podolínec), where they stayed for three years, and then again in Wiśnicz and in nearby Rzemień. The nuns returned to Warsaw only on June 19, 1663. Their former headquarters no longer existed: the wooden monastery was burned by the Swedes, and only the foundations remained of the newly built Church of the Holy Spirit (after "Habit królewny ..." by Bożena Fabiani, p. 59, 76-77). The country was not prepared for such a massive invasion, nor for an evacuation. Many valuable possessions had to be abandoned. Any cultured person would be concerned with such circumstances, which is why John Casimir and Marie Louise even tried to convince the Brigand of Europe, posing as a polite diplomat, not to destroy the luxurious palaces of Warsaw. "The king and queen of Poland sent begging requests at the beginning to prevent their houses in Warsaw from being ruined, telling him that if the kingdom remained with him, he would enjoy them; [...] that they would be obliged to him for this courtesy, and even offered, at that time, to pay him what he could have obtained from them; he promised to do so and even made a civil and gallant compliment for the queen" (Le roi et la reine de Pologne envoyèrent prier au commencement de vouloir empêcher que leurs maisons de Varsovie ne fussent ruinées, lui disant que si le royaume lui demeurait, il en jouirait; [...] qu'ils lui seraient obligés de cette courtoisie, et offrirent même, en ce temps, de lui payer ce qu'il en aurait pu tirer; il promit de le faire et fit même un compliment civil et galant pour la reine), reported in a letter of November 8, 1655 from Głogów Pierre des Noyers, secretary of Queen Marie Louise (after "Lettres de Pierre Des Noyers secrétaire de la reine de Pologne ...", published in 1859, p. 10, 45, 163). In the same letter, des Noyers confirms that their efforts were completely useless. The royal palaces of Warsaw and other residences and houses were plundered and destroyed and, despite huge ransoms, the invaders plundered "even the old nails" (il ne se contenta de les mettre tous à rançon, mais encore après cela il donna leurs maisons et ce qu'il est dedans à des capitaines qui en détachent jusqu'aux vieux clous). The iron prosthetic hand, so-called Stockholm Hand, in the Royal Armory (Livrustkammaren) in Stockholm (LRK 5059), is a 1655 war booty from Warsaw, included among the Warsaw spoils in the 1683 inventory. Another very similar, so-called Skokloster Hand, is in Skokloster Castle (SKO 12286), which also houses many war spoils of Carl Gustaf Wrangel (1613-1676) looted in Poland, such as the oriental-style saber set with turquoise from the Zamoyski collection (inventory number 7320-7323) and agate cutlery in a velvet case of voivode Tomasz Zamoyski (1594-1638), believed to be made in London (SKO 186). The Brigand of Europe was a worthy ruler of the "Goths and Vandals" (Suecorum Gothorum et Vandalorum Rex), the barbarian conquerors of the Roman Empire. According to des Noyers, he even had the ambition to become king of the Romans and emperor, of which his cousin Queen Christina (1626-1689), assured the pope in Rome, worried about the progress of the Protestant invaders in Poland-Lithuania (letter of May 11, 1656 from Głogów). In a letter dated November 2, 1655 from Innsbruck Christina assured her "brother", as she called her cousin in this letter, that "I have not changed the feelings of friendship that I have always had for you, nor the love that I owe to Sweden" (je n'ai point changé les sentiments d'amitié que j'ai toujours eus pour vous, ni l'amour que je dois à la Suède). In April 1656, Polish troops began to approach Warsaw to retake the capital. Swedish count and field marshal Arvid Wirtenberg von Debern (1606-1657), famous for his cruelty and greed, was entrusted with its defense. Hunger reigned in the city, not only among the inhabitants, but also among the Swedish crew. "The imperial envoys, Baron Lisola and Count Pöttingen, who were then in Old Warsaw, left the city and went to the Polish camp because they could no longer bear the moans of the dying and the unpleasant smell of unburied corpses and carcasses" (after "Warszawa w latach potopu ..." by Jan Wegner, p. 72, 78). The destruction of heritage during this and subsequent invasions was so great that even for Polish art historians it is difficult to imagine that the royal and magnate collections of Poland-Lithuania before 1655 were comparable to the most splendid collections of Rome, Florence, Madrid, Paris, Vienna or Munich. This was a huge loss, not only for Polish-Lithuanian heritage, but also for European heritage. People calling for moral reform and penance for sins were granted obedience after this cataclysm. The magnificent Kazanowski Palace, which, although it was looted and badly damaged, was still in a repairable condition, was partially demolished and transformed into a monastery. This all sounds seemingly familiar to anyone with some knowledge of history and connotations like the sacks of Rome, the Dark Ages and the Black Death suggest themselves. Since the Middle Ages, people from Poland-Lithuania have traveled to many European countries, including Italy. They brought to their country beautiful works of art and their effigies created there, but also the reputation of splendid artists and craftsmen. That is why many people who for one reason or another could not travel also wanted to have similar objects. The Italian and Flemish-style funerary monuments of Tarnów Cathedral, one of the finest examples of Renaissance and Mannerist art in Europe, which miraculously survived numerous wars, invasions and accidental fires, testify that the "Sarmatians" were great patrons of art. Those who were "surprised by an untimely death" during their journey were also buried abroad. Several beautiful tombs and epithaphs in Rome testify to the splendid taste of their relatives, who commissioned such monuments. Among the most remarkable are the epithaph of Michał Korniakt (1575-1594), attributed to Nicolas Cordier, sculptor from Lorraine, in the Basilica of Saint Mary of the Altar of Heaven (Santa Maria in Ara Coeli), the epithaph of Eustachy Adam Słuszka (1615-1639), brother of Elżbieta Kazanowska née Słuszczanka (1619-1671), and epithaph of Marcin Katlewski (1600-1656), canon of Poznań and Warsaw, both preserved in the Church of Saint Stanislaus of the Poles and attributed to Giovanni Francesco de Rossi or workshop of Giuliano Finelli. The Sarmatians also frequently went to Italy to seek treatment, benefit from the advice of Italian doctors and above all benefit from a friendlier climate. On August 10, 1677, Katarzyna Sobieska (1634-1694), Princess Radziwill, sister of King John III, and her husband Michael Casimir Radziwill (1635-1680), Deputy Chancellor and Field Hetman of Lithuania, set off from their residence in Biała Podlaska towards Italy to improve their health. The trip was also linked to a confidential mission entrusted to Michael Casimir by the king. The first stage of the journey led through Częstochowa to Silesia and Cieplice, where the Radziwill family stayed for over two weeks, taking advantage of the local thermal waters. From Cieplice they headed towards Venice through Prague, Nuremberg and Augsburg. They reached Venice on December 10, 1677. From there they went to Rome via Padua and Loreto. Prince Michael Casimir separated from his wife and retinue, leaving everyone outside the walls of the Eternal City. On the night of February 19 to 20, 1678, he went to the city, where he held confidential talks for two days. On February 21, Prince Radziwill participated incognito in a forty-hour service in the church of Il Gesù, which was also attended by Pope Innocent XI. The prince was received by the Pope during a private and confidential audience. It was not until February 24 that Michael Casimir and his wife made an official and solemn entry into Rome. They planned to leave on March 10, 1678, but the departure was delayed because they could not refuse the papal invitation to see the most important relics of the Vatican. The Radziwills resumed their return journey on April 2. The cause was malaria, which they both contracted unexpectedly. The situation was worse in the case of Princess Katarzyna and her treatment was provided by the Pope's personal physician, Francesco Giuseppe Borri. They returned to the country in June 1678 (after "Katarzyna z Sobieskich ..." by Jerzy Flisiński, part II). Great prosperity returned to the revived Realm of Venus during the Sobieski period (1674-1696), commemorated by exquisite buildings such as Wilanów Palace, Krasiński Palace (destroyed during World War II, rebuilt after 1948), Lubomirski Bathing Pavilion (Palace on the Ilse, rebuilt at the end of the 18th century), Marywil (demolished), Otwock Wielki Palace or Nieborów Palace. This did not last long, however, because soon, the "great conquerors" returned to plunder and destroy during the Great Northern War (1700-1721) and what was not plundered by them or taken abroad by the Sobieski family or other aristocrats was transferred to Dresden by the Saxon kings, who ruled Poland. Consequently, in current public collections of paintings in the former territories of the Commonwealth it is difficult to find an effigy of Katarzyna Sobieska made during her lifetime, which, given her position and wealth, should have been splendid. In the private collection of Maciej Radziwiłł there are two portraits which represent the sister of John III. One is an inscribed effigy depicting her in mourning, probably after the death of her husband in 1680, the other is an oval painting by a better painter, depicting her seated in a chair. The oval painting comes from another private collection and was sold in Warsaw in 2016 under the title "Portrait of a lady, unidentified painter (19th century)" (oil on canvas, 94 x 74 cm, Rempex, Sale 230, June 15 2016, catalog number: 169). The canvas was exhibited in 2022 at the Nieborów Palace as "portrait of Katarzyna Radziwill née Sobieska (1634-1694), unknown painter, type of Nicolaes Maes, around 1665-1680". The sitter closely resembles the mentioned effigy of Katarzyna in mourning from the same collection. The outfit resembles those in signed and dated portraits of ladies painted by Nicolaes Maes in the late 1670s, such as the 1678 portrait of a lady (Sotheby's New York, January 25, 2015, lot 256, signed and dated lower left: MAES / 1678). However, regarding the style of the painting, the closest are the portraits attributed to Jacob Ferdinand Voet (1639-1689), a Flemish painter, active in Rome between 1663 and 1679. Between 1676 and 1680, he painted the portrait of Pope Innocent XI (Il Ponte Casa D'Aste in Milan, Auction 459, October 22, 2019, lot 123). Portraits of Cardinal Michał Stefan Radziejowski (1645-1705) are also attributed to his workshop (Czartoryski Museum and Saint Mary's Basilica in Kraków). Radziejowski was made a cardinal in 1686, so his portraits must have been made in Paris, where the painter left Antwerp between 1684 and 1686. The cardinal commissioned many luxury items from the French capital, such as silver sculptures and candlesticks with his coat of arms, made in the workshop of Guillaume Jacob. Among those most similar to Katarzyna's portrait are the portrait of a lady, wearing an elaborately embroidered dress, holding a dog from about 1680 (Sotheby's London, April 29, 2010, lot 168), portrait of Cardinal Flavio Chigii (1631-1693) from about 1670 (Palazzo Chigi in Ariccia, inv. 467) and portrait of Cardinal Decio Azzolino (1623-1689) from the 1670s (Lempertz Cologne, Auction 1027, March 26, 2014, lot 52). Although in the case of Radziejowski's portrait it is very unlikely that the painter and model met in person and his effigies were made from study drawings or other portraits sent from Rome or Poland, in the case of Sobieska's portrait the dates of her stay in Rome correspond to those of Voet's activity in the Eternal City. It is also very likely that during the visit to Rome in 1678 the portrait of Katarzyna's husband was painted. This portrait, now housed at the Walker Art Gallery, part of the National Museums Liverpool, was previously attributed to Diego Velázquez and Carlo Maratti and now to the Neapolitan school (oil on canvas, 128 x 90.3 cm, WAG 2865). The style of this painting particularly resembles works attributed to Voet, such as the portrait of Count Orazio Archinto (1611-1683), painted between 1680-1683 (National Museum in Warsaw, M.Ob.925 MNW) or the portrait of an officer from the 1670s or 1680s (Chequers Court in Aylesbury, inv. 556). Not only is the style of the painting similar but also the model's jabot and armor which indicate that all these portraits were made at the same period. Italian researchers also noticed Voet's hand and the style of sitter's jabot typical of European fashion around 1680 (compare "n° 6. Ferdinand Voet, Ritratto di bambina ..." by Francesco Petrucci, 12-13). The resemblance with other effigies of the Field Hetman of Lithuania is quite general, this is probably why the work is presented as "Presumed Portrait of Prince Michael Casimir Radziwill", however comparing it with the IMMOTA SEMPERQVE EADEM medal with bust of the prince, made in Gdańsk by Johann Höhn in 1680, we will notice the same shape of the face and nose. His chin was similarly depicted in the portrait in the National Museum in Warsaw (inv. 22498 MNW). Michael Casimir died on his way back from Rome to Bologna on November 14, 1680, during his next mission to Italy. After the death of her husband, Katarzyna lived alternately in Warsaw, Zhovkva and Yavoriv. In 1691, she left the royal court. She was engaged in charitable work, making many valuable donations to monasteries, churches and other charitable institutions. She died in Warsaw on September 29, 1694 and was buried in the Jesuit church in Nesvizh. During her life, she was called "wise Catherine", and her brother the king often turned to her for advice in the most crucial moments. The most important was the Battle of Vienna, when the Commonwealth's army came to the aid of Austria's besieged capital. The emperor, his family and his court as well as the authorities had fled to Linz, then to Passau further up the Danube. The importance of this victory for all of Europe is best illustrated by the letter of October 23, 1683 from Rome, that Queen Christina of Sweden addressed to the "Victorious King" John III Sobieski: "On this happy day Your Majesty has shown himself worthy not only of the crown of Poland, but that of the universe. The Empire of the world would be due to you if heaven had reserved it for a single monarch. I dare say that no one places a higher value than me on your glory, your work, your devotion, your victory over the masters of Asia, and I am proud that one knew better the dangers, better judged the ruin and extermination with which this great power threatened us. It is to your Majesty, after God, that from now on all other kings owe the preservation of their kingdoms. I, who no longer possess a kingdom, recognize myself indebted to your exploits for my life, my freedom, my calm, which I esteem above all the empires of the earth. However, I must admit my wrongs towards such a great king as Your Majesty. [...] Besides, what I envy of Your Majesty is neither your crown nor your trophies, it is the hardships and dangers, it is the title of liberator of Christianity; it is the satisfaction and the glory of having, it can be said, given life and liberty to your friends and your enemies, because that is what you have done" (after "Histoire de Pologne avant et sous le roi Jean Sobieski" by Narcisse-Achille de Salvandy, Volume III, p. 71-72). Even today many art historians don't want to realize, that mainly thanks to the brave Sarmatians, who protected the city from pillage and destruction, we can admire so many masterpieces of old European art in Vienna, including Venetian portraits of the Jagiellons, identified by me. This victory considerably strengthened Austria which, almost a century later, together with Russia and Prussia, partitioned the Commonwealth. Interestingly, from around 1668, the former queen of Sweden was actively involved in affairs of the Commonwealth, as she wanted to be elected monarch of Poland-Lithuania after the abdication of her distant relative John Casimir. Thanks to the support from Pope Clement IX, her candidacy was important, but it was considerably weakened by the secrecy of all activities entrusted to papal diplomacy in the matter (after "Tajemnicza kandydatura ..." by Dorota Gregorowicz). Her personal envoy hired to win her support in the country was Father Michał Antoni Hacki (died 1703), titular abbot of the Cistercian monastery in Kołbacz. Papal nuncio to the Commonwealth Galeazzo Marescotti (1627-1726) was ordered by the pope to submit Christina's candidacy for the crown. In a letter dated February 19, 1669 to the nuncio the Queen wrote that she was ready to accept all the demands of the Commonwealth, with the exception of marriage - the queen is considered by many current authors to be a lesbian and a transvestite. From 1685, her honorary physician was Doctor Gabriel Felix, a Jew from Poland, whom she recommended to her friends (compare "Polonica w korespondencji ..." by Wacław Uruszczak). Between 1673 and 1687, she sought support for her claims to John Casimir's inheritance in Naples and his property in Rome. Perhaps with these claims or perhaps she again considered her candidacy in the next election after the death of King Michael I, her full-length portrait, now at the Castello Orsini-Odescalchi in Bracciano, is connected. It was purchased between the end of 1691 and the beginning of 1692, by Livio I Odescalchi from Pompeo Azzolino. Her royal mantle is crimson and not blue as in earlier coronation portraits and this portrait resembles effigies of Queen Eleonora Maria Josepha of Austria, widow of Michael I. She also looks very young in this portrait. Another version of this effigy, in half-length, a typical format of Voet's works, was sold with attribution to his circle in 2019 in Madrid under the title "Portrait of a young aristocrat" (oil on canvas, 65 x 53 cm, Fernando Durán, October 10, 2019, lot 1118). In Rome there is a portrait of Queen Marie Casimire de La Grange d'Arquien (1641-1716), wife of John III, close to Voet's distinctive style. This painting is now in the Polish Hospice in Rome and it may have been given to the church by the Bishop of Przemyśl, Jan Stanisław Zbąski in 1687, together with the portrait of King John III. They were to be displayed during masses in honor of the patrons of the Kingdom of Poland - Saints Stanislaus and Casimir and hung in the sacristy, where they were recorded in 1693 (after "Kościół polski w Rzymie ..." by Józef Skrabski, p. 303). The style of this painting closely resembles that of a portrait of a lady by Jacob Ferdinand Voet or studio, made around 1680, now kept in the Prado Museum in Madrid (P006171). If it was created in 1687, Voet's workshop must have painted it from study drawings or other effigies of the queen sent to Paris. The portrait of Giovanni Battista Gisleni (1600-1672), architect, scenographer, director, singer and musician at the Polish-Lithuanian royal court, from his marble epitaph in Santa Maria del Popolo in Rome, is attributed to Voet (compare "Artisti a Roma", ed. Andrea Donati, Francesco Petrucci, p. 86). In the summer of 1655, during the Deluge, Gisleni decided to return permanently to Rome, where he died in 1672. Many of his works were destroyed during the invasion, especially in the looted and burned palaces of Warsaw and Vilnius, where he worked for the court and the royal opera. The king and queen not only ordered paintings from abroad, but also sculptures. Many magnificent statues, made by the workshop of Artus Quellinus II, his son Thomas II and Lodewijk Willemsens, were commissioned in Antwerp for the decoration of the Wilanów Palace in Warsaw, such as the personification of Valor and Fortitudo (Courage and Strength), Prudentia (Prudence), Magnanimitas (Magnanimity) and Splendor Nominis (Glory of the Name) on the facade of the palace, but only a few have been preserved in their original place. The busts of the Roman emperors were made by Bartholomeus Eggers in Amsterdam. Many of these priceless masterpieces were looted by Tsar Peter I (1672-1725), during the occupation of Warsaw by the Russian army in 1707 (compare "Niderlandzkie importy rzeźbiarskie ..." by Michał Wardzyński). "The Register of the Carrara marble statues and other objects taken from Willanów in August 1707" (Connotacya Statui Marmuru Karrarskiego y innych rzeczy w Willanowie pobranych An. August 1707) in the Central Archives of Historical Records in Warsaw lists 24 positions of looted statues, including a large statue of Pallas (item 1) and busts of the king and queen (item 3), marble tables, mirrors, chairs and other objects, as well as devastation of the buildings: "The two pavilions were torn off so that the bare walls remained", "Two large pieces of copper sheets were torn from the roof", "66 broken windows", "windows of buildings [...] were broken". After the war, Elżbieta Helena Sieniawska, née Lubomirska (1669-1729), Grand Hetmaness of the Crown, who purchased the palace, renovated and enlarged the building and replaced the looted statues with new ones. Several statues by Quellinus's workshop are today in the Summer Garden in Saint Petersburg, as well as the busts of John III and Marie Casimire by Bartholomeus Eggers, made around 1687. These are copies made in imitation of the marble in 2011. The originals are kept in the Saint Michael's Castle, a branch of the Russian Museum (white marble, 80 х 89 х 40, ЛС-51 and 86 х 93 х 29, ЛС-50). In the garder there are also two other busts in similar style (originals in the Saint Michael's Castle, white marble, 63 х 66 х 27, ЛС-82 and 61 х 70 х 24, ЛС-38). The statues are said to represent Frederick I of Prussia (1657-1713) and his wife Sophie Charlotte of Hanover (1668-1705), but the man bears no resemblance to effigies of the first king of Prussia, such as the statue by Bartholomeus Eggers made around 1688 (Humboldt Forum in the Berlin, Skulpt.slg. 87). After death of his father on April 29, 1688, at the age of 31, Frederick became Elector of Brandenburg and Duke of Prussia. The man in the bust appears much older than 31 and his jabot resembles that visible in the mentioned portrait of Count Archinto by Voet from the early 1680s. The effigy has no distinction, while in 1690 Frederick becomes Knight of the Garter and founded the Order of the Black Eagle on January 17, 1701, with which he is frequently represented. It is therefore very likely that the two busts were commissioned by Katarzyna Radziwill, who, after the death of her husband, lived in the Royal Castle in Warsaw, where she had an apartment on the second floor. She was also the owner of a palace in the Kraków suburb of Warsaw (now Presidential Palace), which, according to a contract signed by her in 1689, was renovated by the Italian architect Simone Giuseppe Belotti. In 1707, Tsar Peter I lived in this palace during the Russian occupation of Warsaw. The style of the two busts is comparable to the 1683 votive statue of the Madonna of Passau in Warsaw, founded by Belotti (JOSEPH BELOTI / ITALUS), perhaps commissioned in Amsterdam, as it resembles the statues of Fidelitas and Vigilantia from the cenotaph of Lieutenant-Admiral Jacob van Wassenaer Obdam (d. 1665) by Bartholomeus Eggers, located in the choir of St. James' Church in The Hague. The style of the two busts is also comparable to works attributed to Stephan Schwaner, a sculptor active in Warsaw between 1682 and 1692, which were erroneously attributed to Andreas Schlüter, another prominent sculptor active at the time in the Commonwealth (compare "Stefan Szwaner ..." by Michał Wardzyński). The models resemble Katarzyna and her husband from the described portraits by Voet.
Portrait of Katarzyna Sobieska (1634-1694), Princess Radziwill by Jacob Ferdinand Voet, ca. 1678, Private collection.
Portrait of Michael Casimir Radziwill (1635-1680), Deputy Chancellor and Field Hetman of Lithuania by Jacob Ferdinand Voet, ca. 1678-1680, Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool.
Portrait of Queen Christina (1626-1689) by workshop of Jacob Ferdinand Voet, ca. 1673-1680, Private collection.
Portrait of Queen Marie Casimire de La Grange d'Arquien (1641-1716) by workshop of Jacob Ferdinand Voet, before 1687, Polish Hospice in Rome.
Copy of bust of the "Victorious King" John III Sobieski (1629-1696) by Bartholomeus Eggers, ca. 1687 (original), Summer Garden in Saint Petersburg.
Copy of bust of Queen Marie Casimire de La Grange d'Arquien (1641-1716) by Bartholomeus Eggers, ca. 1687 (original), Summer Garden in Saint Petersburg.
Copy of bust of Katarzyna Sobieska (1634-1694), Princess Radziwill by follower of Bartholomeus Eggers or Stephan Schwaner, 1680s (original), Summer Garden in Saint Petersburg.
Copy of bust of Michael Casimir Radziwill (1635-1680), Deputy Chancellor and Field Hetman of Lithuania by follower of Bartholomeus Eggers or Stephan Schwaner, 1680s (original), Summer Garden in Saint Petersburg.
Portrait of Jan Stanisław Jabłonowski on horseback by José García Hidalgo
Between 1682-1688 the sons of Stanisław Jan Jabłonowski (1634-1702), voivode of Ruthenia and Grand Hetman of the Crown and Marianna Kazanowska (1643-1687) - Jan Stanisław (1669-1731) and Aleksander Jan (ca. 1672-1723), studied and travelled throughout Europe. They visited Prague (1682), Paris (1684-1686) and England (1685). After a year's stay in the capital of France, in November 1686, the Jabłonowskis set off on a further journey to Spain and Italy. In January 1687, they reached Madrid, where they spent about three weeks, visiting the city, its monuments, and finally having an audience with the King Charles II of Spain. At the beginning of February, the brothers went back to France. They visited Toulouse and Marseille and then went through Pisa and Siena to Rome and Naples. In mid-August 1687 they returned to Paris via Padua, Milan, Turin and Lyon and from there they returned to Lviv in January 1688 (after "Grand tour ..." by Anna Markiewicz).
From Paris, in 1685, Jan Stanisław and Aleksander Jan sent their portraits to their parents, whom they had not seen for over two years. Sarmatians visiting foreign countries frequently brought their effigies made abroad. It was not only a souvenir of the distant journey, but, as today, a mark of prestige, especially if the model was painted by some eminent painter, such as the court painters of the King of France or the King of Spain. During his stay in Paris in 1671, Jan Kazimierz Denhoff (1649-1697), abbot of Mogiła, not only bought books, but the letters also mention his other planned commission, a portrait. Kazimierz Jan Wojsznarowicz (d. 1677), who between 1667-1669 traveled across Europe as tutor to Prince Aleksander Janusz Zasławski-Ostrogski (1650-1673), during his stay in Rome could not resist the desire to have his likeness, and, as he wrote in his travel diary: "I let myself be painted, he painted me for 4 hours" (dałem się malować, godzin 4 malował mnie) (after "Itinera clericorum ..." by Dauta Quirini-Popławska, Łukasz Burkiewicz, p. 498, 528). At that time, effigies of the Sarmatians reached as far as China. After the victory at Vienna in 1683, the "Victorious King" John III sent to Emperor Kangxi (1654-1722) his portrait. In exchange, Sobieski received an ode written by the emperor and two porcelain vases. The king also wrote personally to Father Ferdinand Verbiest (1623-1688), a Flemish Jesuit missionary in China, who was staying at the court in Beijing (letter of November 16, 1688 from Yavoriv). Nothing is known about this portrait, but if it was shipped from Antwerp, it was probably also commissioned there from local painters. In the National Museum in Warsaw there is a painting entitled "Castellan Jabłonowski on horseback" (oil on canvas, 75 x 56.5 cm, MP 3475 MNW), dated to turn of the 17th/18th century and attributed to Polish school. All the men in this painting wear costumes typical of Spain during the reign of Charles II, as depicted in Family portrait by Jan van Kessel the Younger, dated '1679' (National Museum in Warsaw, M.Ob.813 MNW) and Auto-de-fé in the Plaza Mayor in Madrid by Francisco Rizi, dated '1683' (Museo del Prado, P001126). The style of the painting resembles the works of José García Hidalgo (1646-1719), a Spanish painter active in Madrid and court painter of King Charles II, in particular his Debate of Saint Augustine (Prado, P004755). The model should therefore be identified as Jan Stanisław Jabłonowski, whose father was castellan of Kraków since 1692.
Portrait of Jan Stanisław Jabłonowski (1669-1731) in Spanish costume on horseback by José García Hidalgo, ca. 1687, National Museum in Warsaw.
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