Portrait of Jan Stanisław Jabłonowski, Marshal of the extraordinary Sejm by Rembrandt
"I am an envoy of the entire Commonwealth, and if we leave without doing anything, you will not be able to shut me up before the King, so that I will not complain and protest against those who leave their homeland without any defense, which also I, living on the border, really need", declared Jan Stanisław Jabłonowski (1600-1647), Grand Sword-bearer of the Crown on May 23, 1647. He stated this during the extraordinary Sejm (Diet) in the face of attempts to disrupt the parliament dealing with the most burning issues of defending the borders against the Ottoman Empire and paying the army. Known for his civic attitude, Jabłonowski gained such widespread respect among the nobility that in two consecutive sejms in 1637 and 1640 he was appointed Mashal (after "Szkice Historyczne" by Karol Szajnocha, Volume 3, p. 4-5, 8, 11), that is the chairman of the Chamber of Deputies of the Parliament of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
He was probably one of the best, if not the best, marshal of the Sejm during the reign of Ladislaus IV. Struggling for an effective discussion, he threatened the deputies that he would treat them like cardinals in a conclave and would not let them leave until they reached an agreement (after "Charakterystyka sejmów za Władysława IV" by Sybill Hołdys, p. 207). Under the Henrician Articles, ordinary sejms were convened every two years, and if necessary (e.g. in the event of a direct threat to the state), the king could convene an extraordinary sejm for a period not longer than two weeks. Just before the successful conclusion of the extraordinary Sejm of 1637, the ordinary Sejm presided over by Casimir Leon Sapieha/Sapega (1609-1656) broke down early that year - and the assemblies that followed the Sejm of 1640 in 1642, 1643, 1645 and later were generally also disrupted. Known for his lavish lifestyle and splendid patronage, King Ladislaus IV was in constant need of money. In 1637 he was also preparing for marriage to the Emperor's daughter, Cecilia Renata of Austria, and already at the beginning of that year the treasury began to run empty again. Advised by his entourage, the king wishes to impose a maritime customs duty. Despite the opposition of envoys from Polish Prussia and Lithuania, who almost immediately opposed this idea, it was decided to adopt a constitution imposing this tax at the extraordinary Sejm (Warsaw, June 3-18, 1637). In October 1637, the sovereign sent to Gdańsk the voivode of Sandomierz, Jerzy Ossoliński, and the starost of Kościerzyna, Gerard Denhoff, who announced the introduction of customs duties and the brothers Abraham and Isaac Spiering (Spiring or Spierincx), the sons of the Flemish weaver François Spiering, active in Delft (who made tapestries for Sigismund III), as its collectors (compare "Briefwisseling van Hugo Grotius", p. 675). Their brother Pieter Spiering van Silvercroon (1595-1652), seems to have had a tapestry factory in Gdańsk between 1614-1649. The Marshal of the Sejm was a purely honorary position and he was elected by all deputies, no later than the third day after the opening of the Sejm. From this point on, however, Jabłonowski's career at court gained momentum. In 1638, this experienced deputy, who participated in all sejms since 1635 as a delegate of the Galician sejmik (Galician land in the the Ruthenian Voivodeship), became royal cupbearer of Queen Cecilia Renata and earlier, on November 18, 1637, he received the village of Perehinske, in western Ukraine, from the king. Jan Stanisław was born in Lucha, a private village in the Ruthenian Voivodeship (now Ukraine), where there was a castle. Although the Jabłonowski family of the Prus III coat of arms originated in Masovia (from the village of Jabłonowa near Mława - Jabłonowscii de Jabłonowa in palatinatu Płocensi, in districtu Mlavensi), in the 17th century their "nest" became Ruthenia. The marshal of the extraordinary Sejm of 1637 was the first to obtain an important position in the Commonwealth and thanks to his marriage to Anna Ostrorożanka (1610-1648), daughter of Jan Ostroróg, voivode of Poznań and the Ruthenian princess Sofia Zaslavska, in 1630, he entered into relations with the most distinguished houses of the Commonwealth (after "O Jabłonowskich herbu Prus III" by Wojciech Kętrzyński, p. 3). He was the son of Maciej Jabłonowski (1569-1619), a cavalry master (rotmistrz), and Katarzyna Kłomnicka. He studied at the Jesuit college in Lviv, then traveled abroad for some time. He probably visited France, as the Jabłonowski family cultivated their French connections throughout the 17th century. He took part in the wars with Sweden and the Crimean Tatars in 1624-1629, and with Russia in 1632-1634. A good speaker, known for his speeches at the Sejms in 1633-1642, he was especially active during the winter Sejm of 1637. His son Stanisław Jan Jabłonowski (1634-1702) raised his family to prominence and became voivode of the Ruthenian Voivodeship and Grand Hetman of the Crown. His grandsons, sons of Stanisław Jan, studied at Jesuit schools in Lviv and Prague. They traveled to Berlin, the Netherlands, via Utrecht, Rotterdam, Leiden and Amsterdam, and to Flanders, finally reaching Paris via Leuven and Brussels. Jan Stanisław's granddaughter Anna Leszczyńska (1660-1727) was the mother of the elected king of the Commonwealth Stanislaus Leszczyński and her granddaughter Marie Leszczyńska was Queen of France from 1725, after marrying Louis XV. He was therefore the ancestor of the kings of France Louis XVI (1754-1793), Louis XVIII (1755-1824), Charles X (1757-1836), Marie Clotilde of France (1759-1802), Queen of Sardinia and Maria Luisa of Parma (1751-1819), Queen of Spain. His grandson, Jan Stanisław Jabłonowski (1669-1731), was painted by José García Hidalgo, court painter to King Charles II of Spain, during his stay in Madrid in 1687, wearing a Spanish costume (National Museum in Warsaw, M.Ob.813 MNW). The Grand Sword-bearer of the Crown was buried in the Jesuit church in Lviv, where his great-grandson Stanisław Wincenty Jabłonowski (1694-1754) founded a beautiful late Baroque epitaph for him, bearing an incorrect date of his death - obiit Anno salutis 1659. It was executed between 1744 and 1754, probably by Jerzy Markwart (Georg Marquard) (after "Nagrobek Jabłonowskich ..." by Andrzej Betlej, p. 70, 84). A Polish Nobleman by Rembrandt in the National Gallery of Art in Washington (oil on panel, 96.8 x 66 cm, 1937.1.78) was signed and dated by the painter upper right: Rembrandt.f:. / 1637. Before 1931, when the painting was purchased by Andrew W. Mellon (1855-1937), it was kept for over 100 years at the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg. The "Catalog of paintings found in the Cabinets of the Imperial Palace in Saint Petersburg" (Catalogue des tableaux qui se trouvent dans les Cabinets du Palais Impérial à Saint-Pétersbourg) from 1774, where it was listed as "Portrait of a Turk, half-length, life-size, holding a staff in his hands. On wood, 2 feet wide by 3 feet high" (Portrait d'un Turc, vû à mi-corps, de grandeur naturelle, tenant un Bâton dans la main. Sur Bois, de 2. pieds de large et de 3. pieds de haut, no. 44), is the oldest surely established provenance of this painting. The man cannot be an ambassador of Muscovy (linked to a 1707 sale of Harman van Swol), because this would mean that the authors of the 1774 Catalog made fun of the Empress of Russia (owner of the painting) who, two years earlier, in 1772, partitioned the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, failing to recognize the representative of Russia painted by Rembrandt and confusing him with a Turk. What is very interesting is that in the 19th century in Lviv, where Jabłonowski was buried, and surroundings there were two old copies of the painting. One of them was in the Lubomirski Museum in Lviv and was listed in the 1877 catalog (Katalog Muzeum imienia Lubomirskich) as "Portrait of the Hetman, Copy from Rembrandt (the original in the Hermitage in St. Petersburg is called Radziwill)" (item 445, p. 154). The other, from the collection of Count Karol Lanckoroński (1848-1933) in Rozdil near Lviv, was exhibited in Lviv in 1909, as "An old copy, the so-called Polish Hetman [...] The original is in the Hermitage in St. Petersburg" (after "Katalog ilustrowany ..." by Mieczysław Treter, item 105, p. 31). Lanckoroński also lent to this exhibition an old copy of the Portrait of Pope Julius II by Raphael from his collection (item 104, p. 30) and he owned the portraits of Hendrick van Uylenburgh, artistic agent of the King of Poland, and his daughter Sara by Rembrandt (Royal Castle in Warsaw, ZKW/3905, ZKW/3906), identified by me. At this time, the painting in St. Petersburg was also believed to depict John Sobieski. The man is holding a thick wooden stick-like object that resembles a ceremonial baton of a high-ranking military officer, similar to that seen in multiple portraits of the victorious King John III Sobieski. However, the way he holds it indicates that the staff might be much longer than a ceremonial baton and is in fact a cane. In the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, a cane was a traditional attribute of a marshal (Mareschalcus), the most important "minister" of the country. Traditionally, since the time of Jogaila of Lithuania (d. 1434), there were four marshals: the Grand Marshal of the Crown (Poland and Ukraine), the Grand Marshal of Lithuania, the Court Marshal of the Crown and the Court Marshal of Lithuania. Since this was a more permanent state office, their canes were usually very elaborate, made of precious materials and adorned with precious stones, like the staff seen in the portrait of Casimir Leon Sapieha/Sapega (1609-1656), Court Marshal of Lithuania (Wawel Royal Castle, 9149). Łukasz Opaliński, Grand Marshal of the Crown in his portrait by Stanisław Kostecki (Czartoryski Museum, XII-370) is holding the Marshal's staff decorated with royal monogram - ST (Sigismundus Tertius) of Sigismund III Vasa. The marshal's staff belonging to Stanisław Herakliusz Lubomirski, Grand Marshal of the Crown in the years 1676-1702, is decorated with silver, gold, precious stones (diamonds and almadines) and enamel with symbols of Poland and Lithuania and King John III Sobieski - ITR (Joannes Tertius Rex) (Czartoryski Museum, MNK XIII-3176). In several of his portraits, Lubomirski was depicted holding this cane, such as the portrait in the Palace on the Isle in Warsaw (ŁKr 947), which comes from the collection of the last elected monarch of the Commonwealth - Stanislaus Augustus Poniatowski. The pose of the man in Rembrandt's painting is very similar. Sejm marshals also had canes, but as their function was temporary, just for the duration of the parliamentary session, they were not as elaborate. By striking the floor several times with the marshal's staff, the marshal began the Sejm session. They were also frequently damaged during the sessions as confirmed in the Sejm Diaries from 1704: "the whole day was unlucky, because three of the marshal's staffs broke when he was beating them on the ground to silence them". The loss was not too great, because as Aleksander Łącki, envoy from Łęczyca, noticed during the Sejm (during the dispute over the position of Marshal), it was only a stick which he would get for an ort (1 ort - 18 groszy) (after "Sejm Rzeczypospolitej ... " by Wojciech Kriegseisen, p. 180). One such cane, owned by Stanisław Małachowski (1736-1809), Marshal of the Four-Year Sejm (the Great Sejm, held in Warsaw between 1788 and 1792), preserved in the Czartoryski Museum (oak, 165 cm, MNK XIII-1300). Małachowski was also depicted holding it in his portrait by Józef Peszka (Royal Castle in Warsaw, depisit of the National Museum in Warsaw, 5754). The portrait of Stanisław Marcin Badeni (1850-1912), Sejm Marshal of the Diet of Galicia, is reminiscent of effigies of the Marshals of the Commonwealth (National Museum in Kraków, MNK II-a-524). It was painted by Kazimierz Pochwalski in 1903 and Badeni, who came from a family of Italian origin, in traditional costume, holds the marshal's staff. The man in Rembrandt's portrait wears a fur hat of a shape typical of the Ruthenian and Lithuanian nobility, visible for example in the portrait of Paul IV Sapieha/Sapega (d. 1642) (Wawel Royal Castle, 9164). His costume - hat, fur coat, jewelry resembles that seen in a portrait of a man in eastern costume, most probably a Ruthenian Prince by follower of Aert de Gelder, dated '1639' (National Museum in Warsaw, M.Ob.151 MNW). Similar costumes are visible in the Surrender of Mikhail Shein at Smolensk in 1634 by Christian Melich (Kórnik Castle, MK 03271) with king Ladislaus IV and his dignitaries. The king and his servants wear fashionable French costumes, while the remaining members of his retinue are dressed in the Ruthenian-Lithuanian or Polish-Hungarian style. Similar costumes were also depicted in Stefano della Bella's Allegory of Poland from the 1630s (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, RP-P-OB-34.913) and in effigy of Saint Casimir from HYMNUS QUEM IN B. VIRGINIS HONOREM COMPOSUIT ..., made in Douai in Flanders (now France) in 1638 (National Museum in Kraków, MNK III-ryc.-28781). The print was founded by Ruthenian Mykola-Yuriy Chortoryski (1621-1692), Prince of Klevan, who studied abroad. Before the Counter-Reformation and the growing influence of the Jesuits and Habsburgs at the royal-grand-ducal court, many Ruthenians professed Orthodoxy or Calvinism. To pursue a career at court and study abroad, they frequently converted to Catholicism. Foreign invasions worsened this situation, and from a multi-religious and multicultural nation, Poland-Lithuania became predominantly Catholic and Polish (especially concerning the elites). But before this happened, kings were also depicted in typically Ruthenian costumes. For example, the octagonal portrait of King John II Casimir Vasa, attributed to his court painter Daniel Schultz, depicts him wearing a Ruthenian hat (Royal Castle in Warsaw, depisit of the National Museum in Warsaw, 474 MNW). The style of this effigy is obviously inspired by Rembrandt. Fortunately, it was preserved in Poland, otherwise in a foreign collection it would undoubtedly be known as a portrait of a man (i.e. Dutchman) in oriental costume by a follower of Rembrandt (apart from the obvious resemblance to the monarch and the known history of this painting). The elected king Michael Korybut Wiśniowiecki (1640-1673), who came from the princely Vyshnevetski family of Ruthenian-Lithuanian origin, was represented around 1669 in obviously Ruthenian costume in a print by Nicolas de Larmessin I (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, RP-P-OB-43.940). The purpose of these effigies was exactly the same as in the case of portraits of Holy Roman Emperors in Hungarian or Bohemian costumes, to emphasize that the elected monarchs of the Commonwealth are also the rulers of Ruthenia and that they identify with the main ethnic groups in their country. Such conical-shaped fur hats were still popular in the 19th century among the Ruthenians of Podolia, as depicted in a 1836 lithograph (Przyjaciel Ludu) or in a portrait of Leon Sapieha (1803-1878), Sejm Marshal of the Diet of Galicia, painted by Leopold Horovitz in 1882 (Wawel Royal Castle, 9068). The origins of the coat with a round upper part covered in fur probably came from the medieval costumes of the princes of Ruthenia, possibly inspired by the fashion of the court of the Byzantine emperors in Constantinople (compare with the effigies of the Byzantine emperors Alexios I Komnenos, Michael VIII Palaiologos or Manual II Palaiologos). Even Rembrandt, around 1637, depicted himself in a similar costume in his signed self-portrait in The Wallace Collection (oil on panel, 63 x 50.7 cm, P52). There are numerous such representations of the painter. Average people of the Netherlands preferred French or Dutch fashion, visible in multiple portraits of the Dutch Golden Age. In his signed and dated portrait (Rembrandt / fe 1634) kept at the National Museum in Warsaw (M.Ob.2189), the young merchant Marten Soolmans (1613-1641) wears a typically French costume from the 1630s. The characters in Rembrandt's The Night Watch are also dressed in the mainly Dutch or French fashion of the time. The painter of Dutch merchants and aristocracy should identify himself with his clients by appropriate clothing, while in many of his effigies he resembles an eastern prince or a fur trader, like Nicolaes Ruts, fur trader from Amsterdam (The Frick Collection, 1943.1.150). It looks like he wanted to brag in these self-portraits - look, people of Amsterdam, what beautiful furs and gold chains I received from my Sarmatian/Ruthenian clients or even to paraphrase Jabłonowski, "I am a painter of the entire Commonwealth". Rembrandt's pictorial technique, composed of bold brushstrokes and thick impasto, most likely inspired by the technique of the great Venetians who painted the monarchs of Poland-Lithuania, indicates that he painted fast, and therefore smaller works, notably with the help of frequently mentioned assistants, might only take a few days. Over the course of approximately 45 years of his career (1624-1669), he created approximately 324 paintings that are either signed or attributed to him, which amounts to approximately 7 to 10 paintings per year. The 19th-century French painter Gustave Courbet, who also painted fast and without the help of assistants (in two cases with the help of Hector Hanoteau), estimated that he had completed around 1,000 paintings by 1867 (after "Country Life Illustrated", Volume 163, 1978, p. 260), which makes approximately 36 paintings per year during a 28-year career that began around 1839 in Paris. Rembrandt also made prints, which he also created quite quickly. However, given these facts, either he was lazy or many of his major works were destroyed, such as during the Deluge (1655-1660). No confirmed effigy of Jan Stanisław Jabłonowski has survived, but the man bears a close resemblance to effigies of the marshal's son Stanisław Jan Jabłonowski (1634-1702), Great Crown Hetman by Jean Mariette from about 1682 (National Museum in Warsaw, 99334), his grandson Jan Stanisław Jabłonowski (1669-1731), voivode of Ruthenia, painted by Adam Manyoki in about 1714 (National Museum in Warsaw, PM 4266 MNW) or Jabłonowski's great-grandson King Stanislaus I Leszczyński by circle of Adam Manyoki from the 1720s (sold at Desa Unicum in Warsaw, November 24, 2021, lot 45). The earring in his ear indicates that usually, like the king, he preferred French costume and that he only dressed in Ruthenian costume to demonstrate this attachment to his region and the Commonwealth. In 1637, two Flemish Protestant merchants, raised in Delft in the Netherlands where their father had fled from Antwerp, became tax collectors of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Likewise, we can assume that Rembrandt regularly worked as a remote painter for Commonwealth's clients, including the king, but today we can only imagine how many beautiful paintings he created for them. The destruction of Commonwealth's heritage during numerous wars and invasions was so considerable that many significant objects linked to the monarchs of Poland-Lithuania had to be acquired abroad, such as a series of miniatures of the Jagiellon family by the workshop of Lucas Cranach the Younger purchased in London in the mid-19th century by Adolf Cichowski (Czartoryski Museum). The painting or a series was therefore commissioned by Jabłonowski or the king in Rembrandt's workshop to commemorate the memorable extraordinary Sejm of 1637.
Portrait of Jan Stanisław Jabłonowski (1600-1647), Marshal of the extraordinary Sejm, wearing Ruthenian costume by Rembrandt, 1637, National Gallery of Art in Washington.
Self-portrait wearing Ruthenian costume and two chains by Rembrandt, ca. 1637, The Wallace Collection.
Portraits of Helena Tekla Ossolińska and her father-in-law Stanisław Lubomirski by Simon Vouet and workshop
On July 7, 1637, the young Helena Tekla Ossolińska (1622-1687), aged 15, "Countess of Tęczyn", daughter of the voivode of Sandomierz Jerzy Ossoliński (1595-1650) and Izabela Daniłowiczówna married Aleksander Michał Lubomirski (1614-1677), son of Stanisław (1583-1649), voivode of Ruthenia, and brother of Jerzy Sebastian (1616-1667), "thus uniting the splendor of the house of Ossoliński with the splendor of the house of Lubomirski", two powerful families of magnates of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, as extolled the union Andrzej Hązel Mokrski (1598-1649).
The poet and courtier Adam Gębkowski also dedicated his poem to the young couple (Hymen gdy świętym przymierzem W. JMP. Pan Alexander Lubomirski bierze W. JM. Pannę Helenę Ossolińską ...). The wedding celebrations took place in the sumptuous castle of Helena Tekla's father in Ossolin, in the presence of King Ladislas IV Vasa and many senators. During this meeting, the creation of the Polish-Lithunian chivalric order dedicated to the Virgin Mary ("blessed and immaculate Mother of God of all Christianity") was probably discussed (compare "Saeculum Christianum ...", 1995, Volumes 1-2, p. 280). The creation of this order, modeled on the French Order of the Holy Spirit founded by Henry III of France (also elected monarch of the Commonwealth) in 1578, was suggested to the king by Ossoliński. However, due to opposition from Catholic magnates such as Stanisław Koniecpolski and Stanisław Lubomirski, Primate Jan Wężyk and Grand Hetman of Lithuania Christopher Radziwill, who was a Calvinist, the king confirmed in 1638 in writing that he would not establish an order without the consent of the Sejm. Moreover, after questioning Ossolinski's princely title, received from the Pope and the Emperor, the Sejm also banned the use of aristocratic titles, as they contradicted the equality of the nobility. Miss Ossolińska must have received a good education from her parents, because she was later known as one of the wisest and most influential women of her age. She was also a recognized figure among artists and writers. Her father and husband were also well educated men and traveled to different countries in Europe. Jerzy Ossoliński studied in Graz (Austria) and Leuven/Louvain (Belgium), in England, in Paris and Orleans in France, in Padua, in Bologna, Rome and Naples in Italy. In 1621 he traveled to England as the Commonwealth's envoy. In 1633, as ambassador, he made the famous entry into Rome, and a year later, in 1634, he went to Vienna on a diplomatic mission. In 1636 he visited the Imperial Diet in Regensburg, where he witnessed the election of Ferdinand III. Aleksander Michał, with his brother Jerzy Sebastian, stayed in Ingolstadt (Bavaria) in 1629 and later in Leuven/Louvain, Cologne and Leiden. Together they went to France, Jerzy probably went to Spain and certainly to England for a short time, while Alexander Michał went to Italy (Padua, Rome), where he stayed until 1635. On his return to Poland-Lithuania, he became the king's courtier. The residences of these wealthy, educated men must have reflected the highest taste of the European upper class of the time. Ossolin Castle had rich marble floors, crystal windows set in lead frames, ceilings painted on canvas in gilded frames "as if they were of pure gold" (gzymsy złocone suto jakby szczerozłote), most likely Venetian style, marquetry doors and a library with portraits. In one of the rooms, there were paintings with views of European cities and a fireplace with two statues bearing the Ossoliński coat of arms. Unfortunately, the residence was pillaged and destroyed by Swedish and Transylvanian troops during the Deluge. In 1816, when the country became significantly impoverished during numerous wars, the owner Antoni Ledóchowski, hoping to find the legendary treasures of the Ossolińskis, hidden from invaders, ordered the ruins of the castle to be blown up. Wiśnicz Castle, which belonged to Aleksander Michał and his wife after the death of his father in 1649, was also famous for its rich collections. Helena Tekla contributed to their expansion, because after the death of her father she inherited in 1651 part of his collection of books and works of art, which were located in the residences of the chancellor in Warsaw and Ossolin. These movable assets, in the absence of a male heir, were distributed among the three daughters of Jerzy Ossoliński. During the Deluge, between 1655 and 1659, the castle was evacuated twice by the hosts and plundered three times by enemy troops, who transported the spoils from Wiśnicz on 150 carts (after "Z dziejów polskiego mecenatu ..." by Władysław Tomkiewicz, p. 264). What is interesting is that the castle, reinforced with at least 35 cannons and defended by a crew of more than 200 soldiers, was surrendered to the "Brigand of Europe" without a fight for fear of destruction in October 1655 (compare "Od Ujścia do Warki, 1655-1656" by Henryk Wisner, p. 63). Despite this, after the looting, the castle was destroyed by the Swedes with gunpowder and the neighboring Carmelite monastery was completely plundered ("after "Szwedzi i siedmiogrodzianie ..." by Joźef Gollenhofer, Klemens Bąkowski, Ludwik Sikora, p. 43). The castle was partially rebuilt in 1680-1686. 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 some of the preserved paintings from the collection, including several paintings belonging to Stanisław Lubomirski, such as a large painting of Diana with greyhounds (Obraz wielki Dianna scharty) and Jerzy Ossoliński, such as the Virgin and Child with Saint John "from France" (ze Francyey), Leda and the Swan from the Emperor, Herodias with the head of Saint John the Baptist (Herodianna głowe sw. Jana trzymaiąca w Ramach Hebanowych), Cupid making his bow "from Rome" (Kupido łuk struzący w Ramkach Hebanowych, z Rzymu), perhaps a copy of a painting by Parmigianino, a large painting of the Madonna in a garland of fruit held by angels (Naśw. Panna wielka wieniec około niey z fruktow, ktory Anyeli trzymaia), possibly by Peter Paul Rubens and Jan Brueghel the Elder, allegorical painting showing King Louis XIII of France and Cardinal Richelieu "holding the World" (Król Francuzki z Kardinalem Ryszeli swiat trzymaiacy), the Sacrifice of Isaac by Titian (Abraam zabiiaiący Izaka. Ticyanow), the Suicide of Cato by Jusepe de Ribera (Kato przebiiający się puynałem. Spanioletow), Emperor Titus (?) by Guido Reni (Tycyus Guidoroniego), Susanna and the Elders by Guercino (Zuzanna Gwercine da Cento), Carrying of the Cross on marble by Bassano (Baiulatio crucis na kamieniu Basana), possibly by Jacopo Bassano, Tobias and the Angel by Raphael (Anyoł Tobiasza prowadzący Ramy czarne miescami złociste Raphael de Urbino), the Virgin and Child by Albrecht Dürer (Naswietsza Panna z Panem Jezusem małym na drewnie Alberti Duri), the Infant Christ and Saint John the Baptist in a garland of flowers by Daniel Seghers (Pan chrystus z swietym Janem Feston skwiatow trzymaiacy Jezuity Antuerpskiego), a large painting of Saint Cecilia by Domenichino (Swięta Cecylia wielka Dominikinow) and the Cardinal virtues by Paolo Veronese (Tres virtutes cardinales. Paulo Venorase). Certain mentions such as "my paintings offered or purchased" (Obrazy moie własne tak darowane iako y kupne), in this register as well as a great connoisseurship of the paintings indicate that Aleksander Michał may have been the author of this register or personally supervised its creation. Among the paintings received or purchased, the register lists a copy of the painting of the bathing goddesses (Obraz Bogin kompiących sie. Kopia), Saint Mary Magdalene (?) by Parmigianino, painted on wood (Białagłowa sczaką Parmeganino na drewnie), a painting of an old beggar by Jusepe de Ribera (Obraz ubogiego starego Spenioleti), Venus and Adonis by Francesco Albani (Adon z Venerą w Ramach złocistych Albanow), a tondo representing Hermaphroditus by Francesco Albani (Obraz Harmofredita okrągły Albanow), two Venetian landscapes, one with Saint John the Baptist at the spring on the second a shepherd with cattle (Dwa Lanszafcikow z Wenecyiy na iednym sw. Jan biorący wodę zrzodla na drugim Pastyrz zbydłem) and numerous portraits of Polish-Lithuanian, French and Italian rulers and aristocrats. It is not known what happened to these paintings, perhaps scattered among other residences they were destroyed in other wars or during the great fire of the dilapidated Wiśnicz Castle in 1831. The inventory also includes several effigies of Aleksander Michał and Helena Tekla. Two major effigies of Lady Lubomirska were disguised portraits – one listed as "Portrait of Her Ladyship in the guise of Saint Helena by Mons feuen" (Konterfet JeyMci na kształt świętey Heleny ma miedzi Mons feuen) and the other as "Portrait in full of Her Ladyship in the guise of Diana with greyhounds" (Konterfet cały Jey Mci na kształt Dianny scharty). In the first, she was depicted as her patron Helena of Constantinople, mother of Constantine I, as Queen Bona Sforza in her 1525 portrait by Lucas Cranach the Elder (Cincinnati Art Museum, 1927.387), identified by me. Two portraits of Alexander Michał mentioned in the register were painted by Nicolas Régnier (1591-1667) - "one by Mr Renierow" (ieden P. Renierow), and another "by Renieri from Venice in silver embroidered robe" (ieden Renierego z Venecyey w hawtowanych srebrem sukniach). Régnier, a painter from the Spanish Netherlands, known in Italy as Niccolò Renieri, was active in Venice from 1626. It is possible that some portraits of Alexander Michał's wife were also commissioned in Venice. Curiously, Saint Catherine of Alexandria attributed to the workshop of Nicolas Régnier, today kept at the Sforza Castle in Milan (oil on canvas, 70 x 57 cm, inv. 270), bears the features of Vittoria Farnese (1618-1649), Duchess of Modena and Reggio. The painter's presence in Modena around 1648, when the painting was probably made, is not confirmed, so he must have painted it in Venice. In 1644, he was named "painter to the King of France", undoubtedly to help him escape the requirements of the fraglia dei pittori, so that he could more easily supply paintings to Cardinal Mazarin. Similar to the portrait of Queen Bona, portrait of Empress Eleonor Gonzaga (1598-1655), painted by Lucrina Fetti between 1621-1625 (Ducal Palace of Mantua, Gen. 6864), miniature portrait of Anne of Austria (1601-1666), dowager queen of France, painted by Joseph Werner around 1660 (Musée Condé, OA 1375) or portrait of Vittoria della Rovere (1622-1694), grand duchess of Tuscany, painted by Justus Sustermans in 1669 (Palazzo Corsini in Rome, 428), Helena Tekla was undoubtedly also represented with the traditional attribute of this saint carrying the True Cross of Christ. In the late 1660s, the mistress of Louis XIV of France, Françoise Louise de La Vallière (1644-1710), Duchess of La Vallière, was most likely also depicted as Saint Helena, because such effigy was sold in Stockholm (Bukowski Auktioner, Sale 562, lot 426 / 124687). In 1952, Władysław Tomkiewicz, who analyzed this inventory, suggested that the author of the disguised portrait of Helena Tekla could be Simon Vouet (1590-1649), French painter (compare "Z dziejów polskiego mecenatu ...", p. 271). Vouet studied in Rome, where he married the painter Virginia da Vezzo or Vezzi (d. 1638) in 1626. A year later, in 1627, he was called by Louis XIII to serve as the king's first painter in Paris, where his younger brother Aubin Vouet (1595-1641) had already been working as the king's painter since 1621. He also stayed in Venice, Genoa and Milan and visited Constantinople in 1611. Not only the similarity of Mons [Monseigneur/Monsignore] feuen suggests this, but also the large number of portraits of French monarchs and dignitaries present in the inventory and the fact that the same painter created other paintings from the Lubomirski collection. The register mentions a painting of "Saint Sebastian dying by Mons ouet" (Swięty Sebastian, umierający. Mons ouet) and "Two portraits on copper, one of this Ambassadress in red, the other of the Duchess of Lorraine in blue by Mons Scheuet" (Dwa konterfety na miedzi ieden teyze Posłowey w czerwieni, drugi Xiezny Lotarynskiey w błękitni Mons Scheuet). This ambassadress was Renée du Bec-Crespin (1613/14-1659), comtesse de Guébriant, appointed extraordinary ambassadress of France to the Commonwealth in 1646 and an earlier entry in the inventory mentions another of her portraits, perhaps by the same painter, in the guise of the Virgin: "An image of the French Ambassadress, in the form of the Blessed Virgin Mary" (Posłowey Francuzkiey obraz nakształt Nasw. Panny) and followed by "Two portraits on copper of King Ladislaus and Cecilia [Ladislaus IV Vasa and his first wife Cecilia Renata of Austria]" (Dwa konterfety na miedzi krola Władisława z Cecyliją). Interestingly, Renée is considered the first female ambassador in the history of France and her mission was to help Ladislaus IV's second wife, Marie Louise Gonzaga, gain influence over her husband. It should also be noted that no voices of opposition to the first female ambassador to the "Realm of Venus" are known. Renée was magnificently received in Warsaw, according to the account of her trip by Jean Le Laboureur, published in Paris in 1647 (Relation du voyage de la Royne de Pologne, et du retour de Madame la Mareschalle de Guebriant, Ambassadrice Extraordinaire ...), and "was widely appreciated by the king and Polish lords, received extraordinary honors from them" (after "Starożytności warszawskie ..." by Aleksander Weinert, Volume 2, p. 216). If the ambassadress gave her portrait to the Lubomirskis during her visit to Poland, she must have many copies of it, as there were many important dignitaries worthy to receive it. The fact that there were two of her portraits in the collection of Helena Tekla and her husband that survived the Deluge, indicates that they probably befriended the ambassadress. Ordering numerous copies of the same effigy was then a common practice among the elites. The best example are the copies of portraits of Crown Prince Ladislaus Sigismund Vasa by Rubens, copies of the portrait of Henrietta Maria of France (1609-1669), Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland in the guise of Saint Catherine of Alexandria, original painted by Anthony van Dyck in about 1637 (Christie's London, January 24, 2012, lot 261, Palace of Versailles, MV 3425 or Hatchlands Park, NT 1166715) or a series of portraits of Lady Mary Villiers (1622-1685), Duchess of Richmond and Lennox as Saint Agnes by Anthony van Dyck and circle, painted around 1637 and after on the occasion of her second marriage at the age of 15 (Windsor Castle, RCIN 404402, Lacock Abbey, 996277 and Christie's London, Auction 3475, lot 36). Accordingly, if four or five paintings - (1) portrait of Helena Tekla as Saint Helena, (2) Saint Sebastian, (3) portrait of Madame de Guébriant, (4) portrait of Duchess of Lorraine and, possibly, (5) portrait of Madame de Guébriant in the guise of the Virgin Mary, were all by Simon Vouet, very probably also the effigy of Helena Tekla as Diana was created by him. The representation as the Roman goddess of hunting, fertility and childbirth indicates that the painting was made to receive a "blessing" for the young bride, therefore before or shortly after the wedding. In this sense it is comparable to the portrait of the young Mary II (1662-1694), when princess, in the guise of Diana, painted around 1672 by Peter Lely (Hillsborough Castle, RCIN 404918). The future Queen of England is blonde in this portrait (in her later effigies she has dark hair). The description in Wiśnicz's inventory mentions a full-length portrait, but this does not mean that the painting was vertical (standing, as in the portrait of the future queen of England), but could also be horizontal (reclining, as in the portraits by Cranach). It is interesting to note that such a painting of Diana, painted by Simon Vouet in 1637, the year of Helena Tekla's marriage, is today in Hampton Court Palace in England (oil on canvas, 104.3 x 147.5 cm, RCIN 403930). The painting was first recorded in the Royal Collection in 1710, described as a "Diana of Vouet", over the door in the Drawing Room of Somerset House - traditionally the Queen's residence. There is no trace of this work in the inventories of Charles I nor in the Commonwealth Sale (Sale Inventory, ca. 1649-1651), the latter however mentions: "Done in Poland, King of Poland, full-length" at the Armory at St James's (WS 151, No. 10) and "King of France with Madonna and Child" (WS 60, No. 14). The painting was inscribed by the artist, lower right (on the quiver): Simon Vouet / F. [fecit] Paris 1637. As indicated in Description of the painting (Royal Collection Trust) "the addition of the place of execution is unusual for Vouet and may indicate that the work was to be sent abroad". Any provenance before 1710 can only be supposed at the moment, so the hypothesis that Jerzy Ossoliński sent to England (to his friends met during his studies or in 1621) a disguised portrait of his daughter, commissioned in Paris, is also possible. Such a horizontal composition refers to Cranach's nude portraits of Queen Bona as Diana-Egeria, paintings identified by me. One of the most famous works by Simon Vouet or his entourage - the allegorical portrait of Anne of Austria (1601-1666), cousin of King Ladislaus IV Vasa, now kept in the Hermitage Museum (ГЭ-7523), is also a disguised portrait. The Queen of France was depicted as Minerva, goddess of wisdom, victory and strategy. Only the features of the sitter, looking at the viewer, indicate that it is a portrait, because the Latin inscription on the base is the beginning of the sentence from Juvenal's "Satires": "Fortune never fails, [if there is prudence]" (Nullum numen abest, [si sit prudentia]). The disguised portrait of Anne of Austria testifies that the artist beautified his models or adopted their features according to classical canons of beauty. Saint Catherine from private collection in Naples, attributed to Vouet, is considered to be a disguised portrait of artist's sister-in-law Ursula da Vezzo (Sotheby's New York, January 25, 2017, lot 39) and Vouet's painting in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (M.83.201) is believed to be a portrait of his wife Virginia as Saint Mary Magdalene. The woman in the Hampton Court Palace painting bears a close resemblance to Helena Tekla, as shown in her portraits preserved in Poland, all created after the Deluge, especially the effigies as a nun, created after 1681 - in Wilanów Palace (Wil.1340) and a copy in the parish church of Saint Joseph in Klimontów. A studio copy of "Diana resting" was sold in Paris in 2019 (oil on canvas, 120 x 168 cm, Sotheby's, June 26, 2019, lot 81). As the Lubomirskis owned many effigies of French monarchs and aristocrats, the French may also have had the portrait of Lady Lubomirska, especially since it was commissioned in France. It is also possible that the painting returned to its country of origin in the 19th century or earlier, with the move of many Polish-Lithuanian aristocrats to France. A study for Diana's head by Vouet or his studio is in the Louvre (RF 28221, Recto). It is possible that the painting: "A young person with a greyhound, French style" (Osoba jakaś młoda z chartem tarantowatym, po francusku, 837/17), mentioned in the inventory of Princess Louise Charlotte Radziwill (1667-1695) which survived the Deluge (compare "Inwentarz galerii obrazów Radziwiłłów z XVII w." by Teresa Sulerzyska), was another disguised effigy of Lady Lubomirska. The painting was also reproduced in several engravings. They have an oval shape, so the original could also have been oval. The mirror version, made by Michel Dorigny in Paris in 1638, so the following year, is signed and dated: S. Vouet pinxit. / Cu priuilegio / M. Dorigny scul. / Parisi 1638 (Leiden University Libraries, PK-P-144.428). The version in the National Library of Poland (G.31201) reproduces the original layout of the painting. Paintings were usually available primarily to customers who ordered them, so the artist, probably proud of his work, wanted his composition to be accessible to a wider audience, which is why the prints were made. Sometimes also, the owners of the original paintings wanted a wider distribution. For example, the so-called Hesselin Madonna or Madonna of the oak cutting at the Louvre (RF 2004 19), produced by Simon Vouet for the Parisian house of Louis XIII's secretary Louis Hesselin around 1640-1645, was reproduced in a print made by Michel Dorigny in 1651 and bearing the Hesselin coat of arms on the lower margin (British Museum, 1841,1211.39.54). The features of the Hesselin Madonna are quite distinctive, which is why the secretary's wife, Renée d'Elbeuf, was probably depicted as the Virgin. The same woman was represented in another painting attributed to Simon Vouet, sold in London in 2019 (oil on canvas, 60.7 x 49.5 cm, Sotheby's, December 5, 2019, lot 115). This "Study of a young woman as the Virgin" was previously considered to represent the artist's wife, Virginia, based on a drawing by Marie Metézeau kept at the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Rennes (794.1.2691), signed: Virginia de Vezzo Sim.s Voüet Regis Christianissimj / Pictoris conjux charissima clarissima Inuentrix & Pinxit [...]. Basing on this drawing, usually dated to the second half of the 17th century, so several years after Virginia's death, another version of the painting from the Galleria Apolloni in Rome (oil on canvas, 60.3 x 50.2 cm, Bonhams London, July 11, 2001, lot 122), is identified as her self-portrait or her likeness by a follower of Simon Vouet. Additionally, the inscription in Rennes' drawing is ambiguous and it can also be interpreted that Virginia painted the original or another version of the painting. The painting sold in London comes from a private collection in Austria (by the 1970s, thence by descent) and was traditionally attributed to Philippe de Champaigne. It is therefore very possible that already in the 17th century, one painting was sent to the Pope or cardinals in Rome and the other to the Emperor in Vienna. Such "distribution" of effigies was typical for the European high aristocracy. The colors of the clothing - blue and red - clearly indicate that the subject represents the Virgin (compare with Catalogue Note). The magnificent painting attributed to Vouet, probably painted in Italy, which is now in the National Museum in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 100 x 75.5 cm, M.Ob.646, earlier 128630), testifies that his talent was probably recognized by the patrons from the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth already shortly after its creation. This vanitative painting, inspired by Caravaggio, is generally dated around 1621 and comes from the State Art Collections, possibly from the Royal Castle in Warsaw. It shows the Ill-matched couple with a young woman pointing to a skull (Vanitas). Finally also certain portraits preserved in the former territories of the Commonwealth are close to the distinctive style of Vouet, his workshop or his circle. These include a portrait of Helena Tekla's father-in-law, Stanisław Lubomirski, now in the former royal residence - Wilanów Palace in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 81 x 65.8 cm, Wil.1258). It bears an incorrect later inscription identifying the sitter as Stanisław's grandson, Stanisław Herakliusz Lubomirski (1642-1702). The style of this painting is very similar to the portrait of a woman, probably Ursula da Vezzo, as Saint Agnes by circle of Simon Vouet (Sotheby's London, April 24, 2008, lot 204). The voivode of Kraków was very concerned about the good distribution of his effigies, because despite numerous wars and destruction, several have survived, such as the full-length portrait from Wiśnicz Castle, perhaps painted by Stanisław Kostecki between 1638-1649 and repainted in the 18th century (National Museum in Warsaw, 128870/2 MNW) or effigy from the portrait gallery of the founders and benefactors of the Piarist monastery in Warsaw, made after 1647 (MP 3202 MNW). In all of them he was depicted in national costume. Another similar portrait of Stanisław Lubomirski, in oval, can be found today in the National Museum of Art in Kaunas, Lithuania (oil on canvas, 54 x 48 cm, ČDM Mt 1507). It is also incorrectly identified - as the effigy of Jan Karol Chodkiewicz or Jonas Karolis Chodkevičius (d. 1621), Grand Hetman of Lithuania, and comes from the collection of Countess Jadwiga Hutten-Czapska (1866-1943) in Beržėnai Palace. It entered the museum's collections in 1940. Its style is comparable to Saint Margaret by the workshop of Simon Vouet (Galerie Meier, Anticstore, Ref: 88152) and portrait of a lady with a red drapery by circle of Simon Vouet, possibly Virginia da Vezzo (Artcurial, March 22, 2023, lot 69). In addition to the portrait of the voivode of Kraków, Countess Hutten-Czapska also owned the Mercury and the Three Graces by Michel Dorigny or workshop of Simon Vouet, painted after 1642, now also kept in the National Museum of Art in Kaunas (oil on canvas, 172 x 137 cm, ČDM Mt 1445). This is a version of a lost original by Vouet reproduced in a 1642 engraving by Dorigny (Leiden University Libraries, PK-P-144.488). Between 1940 and 1941, Nazi German invaders destroyed the beautiful Church of the Discalced Carmelites in Nowy Wiśnicz, founded by Stanisław Lubomirski in 1622, along with its Baroque furnishings. The history after 1655 has always been very cruel to the Realm of Venus, and although nothing has been preserved of the rich furnishings, visitors can still admire the beautiful architecture of Wiśnicz and local institutions are doing much to renovate, rebuild and collect as many traces of past splendor as possible.
Ill-matched couple (Vanitas) by Simon Vouet, ca. 1621, National Museum in Warsaw.
Portrait of Helena Tekla Ossolińska (1622-1687) as Diana by Simon Vouet, 1637, Hampton Court Palace.
Portrait of Helena Tekla Ossolińska (1622-1687) as Diana by workshop or circle of Simon Vouet, ca. 1637, Private collection.
Diana by Michel Dorigny after Simon Vouet, ca. 1637, National Library of Poland.
Diana by Michel Dorigny after Simon Vouet, 1638, Leiden University Libraries.
Portrait of Helena Tekla Ossolińska (1622-1687) as Madonna by Simon Vouet, ca. 1637-1638, Private collection.
Portrait of Helena Tekla Ossolińska (1622-1687) as Madonna by workshop of Simon Vouet or Virginia da Vezzo, ca. 1637-1638, Private collection.
Portrait of Stanisław Lubomirski (1583-1649), voivode of Kraków by workshop or circle of Simon Vouet, ca. 1638, Wilanów Palace in Warsaw.
Portrait of Stanisław Lubomirski (1583-1649), voivode of Kraków by workshop or circle of Simon Vouet, ca. 1638, National Museum of Art in Kaunas.
Mercury and the Three Graces by Michel Dorigny or workshop of Simon Vouet, after 1642, National Museum of Art in Kaunas.
Portrait of Vittoria Farnese (1618-1649), Duchess of Modena and Reggio as Saint Catherine of Alexandria by workshop of Nicolas Régnier, ca. 1648, Sforza Castle in Milan.
Portraits of Anna Catherine Constance Vasa by Peter Danckers de Rij
With the new dynasty, the Vasas, the focus of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth's international politics shifted from south of Europe to the north. Sigismund III Vasa, elected monarch of the Commonwealth was born in Sweden and on February 19, 1594 he was crowned King of Sweden and Grand Duke of Finland.
Curiously, exactly around that time, Venetian painting workshops began to decline, there are no more such great painters in Venice, native to the Republic, in subsequent decades like Giorgione, Lorenzo Lotto, Palma Vecchio, Sebastiano del Piombo, Titian, Tintoretto, Jacopo Bassano or Veronese. Domenico Fetti was born in Rome and then worked in Mantua for ten years and Bernardo Strozzi was born and initially mainly active in Genoa. Commonwealth's monarchs began to visit more often the main economic center of the country and its main seaport - Gdańsk in the north. Sigismund III was there several times, for the first time when he arrived from Sweden in October 1587. Also his predecessor Sigismund II Augustus was a guest in the city in July 1552. On September 23, 1561 the top of the tower of the main Town Hall of Gdańsk was adorned with a gilded statue of the king with an accentuated codpiece, designed by Dutch Dirk Daniels. In 1564-1568 the Green Gate in the style of Flemish mannerism was built by architect Regnier van Amsterdam as the formal residence of Poland's monarchs. Not only in architecture, but also in painting, Flemish and Dutch style become the most popular in the Vasa era in Poland, at least in the northern part of the country. In 1624, Prince Ladislaus Sigismund Vasa, future Ladislaus IV, visted Rubens' workshop and was painted by him. Ladislaus invited to Warsaw the author of his "Art Collection" (Royal Castle in Warsaw), most probably Étienne de La Hire, and Rubens recommended Pieter Claesz Soutman, a Dutch painter born in Haarlem, who was appointed royal court painter, he, however, returned to Haarlem in 1628. All of Ladislaus' relatives and other monarchs employed at their courts Flemish and Dutch painters. Rubens painted his Spanish cousins, monarchs of France and England, Flemish painter Justus Sustermans worked for the Medici family in Florence and his aunt Maria Maddalena of Austria (1589-1631), another Flemish painter, Frans Luycx, became the leading portrait painter at the imperial court of his cousins in Vienna, Justus van Egmont, also Flemish, worked in France at the court of his cousin Queen Anne of Austria (1601-1666), Antoon van Dyck (Anthony van Dyck) in England, Karel van Mander III was active at the Danish royal court and numerous other. Around 1636-1637, in connection with the extensive work at decorating royal residencies in preparation for the king's wedding, Ladislaus employed Peter Danckers de Rij, who was initially active in Gdańsk. Danckers de Rij was born in Amsterdam and probably returned there during the Deluge (1655-1660). Despite her qualities and wealth, like in the case of her grandmother and her grandmother's sister Isabella Jagiellon, it was not an easy task to find a suitable match for Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651), the sister of Ladislaus, who reached adulthood around that time. Hereditary rulers of Europe were not interested to marry a sister of the elective monarch. After the death of her parents in 1631 and in 1632, Parliament granted her the counties of Brodnica, Gołub and Tuchola. The lands had previously belonged to her mother, but Anna could not exercise her rights until she came of age in 1638. Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg, and Gaston, Duke of Orléans (brother of King Louis XIII of France), were among candidates for her hand. Despite the agreements of 1639 and 1642 to marry her to Archduke Ferdinand Charles of Austria-Tyrol (1628-1662), the marriage never took place, due to the age of the groom who was 11 years old in 1639 and the disagreement over the amount of her dowry. On June 8, 1642, in Warsaw she married Philip William of Neuburg. In the Imperial Castle in Nuremberg there are two portraits deposited by the Germanisches Nationalmuseum (inventory numbers NbgKbg.L-G0006, NbgKbg.L-G0007) which according to inscription in German on the frame depict Emperor Leopold I (1640-1705) and his wife Infanta Margaret Theresa of Spain (1651-1673). The man's costume, however, with embridered doublet topped with beautiful lace collar, matching breeches and a lovelock, is typical for European fashion in the 1630s. His pose and facial features are identical to those visible in a portrait of Prince John Casimir Vasa, brother of Ladislaus IV, in the Gripsholm Castle in Sweden and his miniature portrait in the Bavarian National Museum, both attributed to Peter Danckers de Rij. The woman from the pendant portrait, who bear no resemblance whatsoever to effigies of Infanta Margaret Theresa, must be therefore his only sister Anna Catherine Constance, as John Casimir was unmarried at that time (oil on canvas, 213 x 122 cm, Bavarian State Painting Collections, 6996). She was portrayed in a little outdated outfit, crimson Spanish style saya and a large ruff. Her face and pose are identical as in the portrait from the Ambras Castle in Innsbruck in Tyrol (most probably sent to Archduke Ferdinand Charles), identified as effigy of Archduchess Cecilia Renata of Austria, Queen of Poland (Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, GG 5611). In this portrait her costume is more à la mode - in 1642 Queen Cecilia Renata asked her younger brother Leopold Wilhelm of Austria, through Estebanillo González who visited Warsaw the same year, to send her some Dutch lace and a doll dressed in fashionable French attire. Both the Queen and her sister-in-law Anna Catherine Constance, knew the fashion trends well. This woman bears no resemblance to effigies of Cecilia Renata in the Gripsholm Castle (NMGrh 299, NMGrh 1417), and in the State Historical Museum in Moscow (И I 5922), painted by Peter Danckers de Rij. She is holding an oriental folding fan with a pattern resembling an inscription in Arabic, hence possibly acquired in Venice, exactly like in portraits of Anna Catherine Constance's grandmother Catherine Jagiellon by Moroni and Titian. The same woman was also depicted in a miniature painting in the Castello Sforzesco in Milan (oil on copper, 6 x 5 cm, inventory number 863), also painted in the style of Peter Danckers de Rij. Her sumptuous clothes and jewelery are truly regal, which is why the miniature is sometimes considered to depict Elizabeth Stuart (1596-1662), Queen of Bohemia. The work was donated to the Civic Collections in 1945 by Giorgio Nicodemi (1891-1967) who, in turn, had received the collection, which features several portraits of people from the Morando and Attendolo Bolognini families, from Countess Lydia Morando Bolognini (after "Museo d'arte antica del Castello sforzesco: pinacoteca", Volume 5, p. 332). Her costume is typical for Central Europe, Austria and Bavaria in the 1630s, like in the portraits of Maria Anna of Austria (1610-1665), Electress of Bavaria, sister of Cecilia Renata in the Alte Pinakothek in Munich from about 1635 or in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna from about 1643. Similar costumes are also visible in portraits of Éva Forgách, wife of Count István Csáky (1610-1639), dated '1638', in the Hungarian National Museum, Baroness Maria Laymann-Libenau, also dated '1638', in the Ptuj Ormož Regional Museum, Countess Erzsébet Thurzó, wife of István Esterházy, dated '1641', in the Forchtenstein Castle or on the silver medal with bust of Anna Leszczyńska née Radzimińska from 1614 in the National Museum in Lublin. She was also depicted in a portrait, also very in the style of Danckers de Rij, although attributed to Govert Flinck, from the French private collection (oil on canvas, 60 x 73 cm, sold at Vanderkindere in Brussels, March 23, 2021, lot 67). This painting represent "Venus reclining" inspired by Venus of Urbino in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, which is a portrait of a sister of Anna Catherine Constance's grandmother Isabella Jagiellon. A work painted in a very similar style is in the National Museum in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 91.5 x 130.5 cm, M.Ob.945, earlier 215 Tc/70, 302/2/73). It represents Sleeping Cupid and comes from the collection of Eugenia Kierbedziowa (1855-1946), who died in Rome. She bequeathed the painting in 1943 and it entered the museum after World War II in 1970. The earlier provenance is unknown, so it has been assumed that Kierbedziowa probably acquired it in Italy and compared to some works by Francesco Albani or his entourage, like Cupid disarmed by the nymphs at the Louvre (INV 34; MR 1607) or the Triumph of Diana (Winter) at the Borghese Gallery in Rome (inventory number 049). It is, however, quite possible that Eugenia, who lived in exile in Italy from 1909, purchased this painting earlier in Lithuania, Warsaw or Saint Petersburg, where she was born. Cupid was the god of desire, erotic love, attraction and affection and the son of the goddess of love Venus and the god of war Mars. The comparison with the mentioned works of Albani and others of his putti is very general, while the style of the painting resembles a signed and dated work by Danckerts de Rij - portrait of Queen Cecilia Renata in the Nationalmuseum of Stockholm (Peter. Danckers fecit A:o 1643, NMGrh 299). The queen is standing in a loggia of the Villa Regia palace in Warsaw and in the background there is a fountain with a statue of Cupid on a dolphin.
Miniature portrait of Crown Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651) by Peter Danckers de Rij, ca. 1638, Castello Sforzesco in Milan.
Portrait of Crown Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651) with a dog by Peter Danckers de Rij, ca. 1638, Imperial Castle in Nuremberg.
Portrait of Crown Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651) nude by Peter Danckers de Rij, ca. 1638-1642, Private collection.
Sleeping Cupid by Peter Danckerts de Rij, ca. 1640, National Museum in Warsaw.
Portraits of Anna Catherine Constance Vasa as Danaë by Italian painters
Villa Regia, which means Royal Villa in Latin, was the leisure suburban residence of elected king Ladislaus IV Vasa in Warsaw. This splendid palace, inspired by the Villa Poggio Reale in Naples, was probably built between 1634 and 1641 according to the design attributed to the Italian architect Giovanni Trevano. The king, who was a renowned patron, filled it with the most refined works of art produced by the artists of his court, such as Bartholomeus Strobel, Peter Danckerts de Rij and Giacinto Campana, and commissioned abroad, in Italy, Flanders, the Netherlands, Germany, Persia and Turkey.
Detailed descriptions or inventories of the palace have not survived. However, there were undoubtedly works by Peter Paul Rubens, Jan Brueghel the Elder, Peter Snayers, Daniel Seghers, Jacob Jordaens, Pieter Claesz Soutman, Frans Luycx, Justus van Egmont, Rembrandt, Guercino and Guido Reni there, as their workshops were visited by Ladislaus during his trip between 1624-1625 or acquisitions of their paintings are confirmed in other documents. Saint Francis in Ecstacy, possibly by Guido Reni, was described in the chapel of Villa Regia in Adam Jarzębski's "Short Description of Warsaw" from 1643 (verses 1971-1976). The sculptures were also most likely all imported, including ancient sculptures like the Pseudo-Seneca from the Ladislaus' collection, carved in the 2nd century (Archaeological Collection of the University of Zurich). The bronze statues in the so-called "secret garden" (giardino secreto) were most likely cast by Adriaen de Vries in Prague, as their descriptions in Adam Jarzębski's poem perfectly match some of the statues at Drottningholm Palace in Sweden. Marble busts of John II Casimir Vasa and Marie Louise Gonzaga, created by the Roman sculptor Giovanni Francesco Rossi around 1651 (Nationalmuseum in Stockholm), most likely adorned the palace's Marble Hall. During the Deluge, the invaders not only plundered all the movable furnishings, such as paintings, sculptures, tapestries and silverware, but also devastated the interiors. Pierre des Noyers, secretary to Queen Marie Louise, in a letter dated November 8, 1655 from Głogów, describes the devastation of the three royal palaces (Royal Castle, Ujazdów and Villa Regia), in particular the looting of the marble paving, the destruction of a colonnade made up of 32 beautiful marble columns and that the king of Sweden even plundered the windows (Quant au roi de Suède [...] il n'a pas laissé, nonobstant cela, de faire dépaver les trois palais, et emporté ce pavé qui est de marbre; de faire rompre une loge qui était dans le jardin, composée de 32 belles colonnes de marbre qu'on a rompues en les défaisant. Ce n'est pas tout; il fait emporter les croisées et les vitres; ce ménage là m'a surpris). In a letter dated June 1, 1656 from Głogów he adds that: "In a letter I received from Warsaw, I was told of the horrible damage the Swedes did there; They burned the new town and all the suburbs where all the palaces were; but what is more enraged is that they did not want to allow the inhabitants to get anything from their houses, so that people who were rich now depends on alms" (Dans une lettre que j'ai reçue de Varsovie, on me dit l'horrible dégat que les Suédois y ont faits; ils y ont brûlé la ville neuve et tous les faubourgs où étaient tous les palais; mais ce qui est de plus enragé, c'est qu'ils n'ont pas voulu permettre aux habitants de rien tirer de leurs maisons, de sorte que des gens qui étaient riches sont à l'aumône) (after "Lettres de Pierre Des Noyers ...", published in 1859, p. 10-11, 175). The thieves transported their loot on barges intended for transporting grain. Some barges overloaded with heavy marbles sank shortly after leaving Warsaw and the low level of the Vistula in 2011, 2012 and 2015 revealed them, including elements of the marble loggia of the Villa Regia. The memory of Sarmatia's splendid temple of arts was still vivid after the Deluge, so when the Commonwealth revived during the Sobieski period (1674-1696), the newly elected king (victorious king) John III Sobieski decided to recreate it by founding his Villa Nova, i.e. the New Villa (Wilanów Palace) in Warsaw. It was created by Polish-Italian architect Augustyn Wincenty Locci and partially inspired by the Villa Doria Pamphili in Rome. Court painter Jerzy Siemiginowski-Eleuter, trained in Rome, created many paintings, including ceiling paintings with disguised portraits of the king's wife, Queen Marie Casimire Louise de La Grange d'Arquien (1641-1716), also known by the diminutive "Marysieńka" Sobieska, who came to the Commonwealth from France as a child as a court lady of Marie Louise Gonzaga. The queen of the Realm of Venus was depicted as half-naked Aurora-Astraea in the King's Bedroom and the Queen's Mirror Study. In her portrait created around her coronation in 1676 by the workshop of Daniel Schultz, royal court painter (Royal Castle in Warsaw, ZKW/65), the queen proudly shows off her jewels: a royal crown and scepter, huge pearls, rubies (or garnets) and diamonds, as well as a nipple. Several decades later, another influential woman who expanded and rebuilt the palace, Elżbieta Sieniawska (1669-1729), was depicted as half-naked Flora, Roman goddess of flowers and fertility, in a fresco by Giuseppe Rossi, painted between 1726-1729 in the lower vestibule of the palace. The main paintings of Villa Nova were created in the Protestant Netherlands - there were several paintings by Rembrandt, as well as Flemish painters Anthony van Dyck and Jan van Kessel the Elder and most likely copies or originals by Raphael, the Caracci brothers, Guido Reni and Bernardo Strozzi. The palace inventory of 1696 describes paintings that may be originals or copies of The Love Letter (No. 156.) and The Milkmaid (No. 180.) by Johannes Vermeer. The palace was filled with large quantities of silverware made in Paris and Augsburg, including a three-tiered silver fountain and a silk canopy in the king's bedroom was gifted by the Shah of Persia. Sculptures were commissioned in Flanders from the workshop of Artus Quellinus II and his son Thomas II and busts in the Netherlands from the workshop of Bartholomeus Eggers, including the busts of the royal couple (Summer Garden in Saint Petersburg, looted in 1707). The garden was decorated with gilded lead sculptures made in Gdańsk by Gaspar Richter and vases carved from cherry marble from Chęciny. This also gives an idea of the beauty of Villa Regia. Erotic poems, such as the 12-part poem "Cupid's Lessons" (Lekcyje Kupidynowe), with which Kasper Twardowski made his debut in 1617 or many others compiled in 1675 by Jakub Teodor Trembecki, prove that the Commonwealth wasn't that prudish, especially before the Deluge, as some authors want to see it. In the Nationalmuseum in Stockholm there is a painting of Danaë and the shower of gold (oil on canvas, 111 x 150 cm, NM 1568), formerly attributed to Giuseppe Salviati (1520-1575), also known as Giuseppe Porta. The general style of the painting, the curtains and the table indicates that it is more of a Baroque painting and not of the late Renaissance. The style is Venetian, close to Titian and inspired by his "Venus of Urbino", which is a portrait of sister of Anna Catherine Constance's grandmother - Isabella Jagiellon. The painting almost directly reproduces the similar nude effigy of Ladislaus IV's sister by Peter Danckers de Rij from the private collection in France (sold at Vanderkindere in Brussels, March 23, 2021, lot 67), identified by me. The painting comes from the collection of Count Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie (1622-1686), probably offered to him by Queen Christina of Sweden. According to the catalog of the 1966 exhibition "Christina, Queen of Sweden - a Personality of European Civilisation", the painting was looted by the Swedish forces of General Hans Christoff von Königsmarck in Prague in 1648 (p. 479). The authors determine the provenance on the following mentions in the inventory of the imperial collections in 1621: "Danaë and the golden rain by Hans von Aachen" (Danaae mit dem güldenen regen vom Hansen von Acha., no. 1021) (after "Das Inventar der Prager Schatz- und Kunstkammer vom 6. Dezember 1621 ..." by Heinrich Zimmermann, p. XLII) and 1652 inventory of Queen Christina's collection: "As above, representing a naked woman" (Dito, representant une femme nue, no. 190) or "As above, a disheveled woman, on canvas" (Dito, une femme eschevellée, sur de la toile, no. 300). Such references do not make it possible to determine this with certainty. If the painting comes from Prague, then the Habsburgs probably received the portrait of their relative princess of Poland-Lithuania in mythological disguise. It is also possible that it was looted by De la Gardie during the Deluge, when with 9,000 soldiers he plundered the estates of the princess in Polish Prussia. Danaë was the daughter and only child of King Acrisius of Argos and mother of the hero Perseus by Jupiter, king of the gods, who came to her in the form of golden rain. John Ridewall (Johannes Ridovalensis), a 14th century English Franciscan monk, in his Fulgentius Metaforalis, interpreted Danaë as a prefiguration of the Virgin Mary, because she also conceived virginally (Si Danae auri pluvia a Iove pregnans claret, cur Spiritu Sancto gravida Virgo non generaret?). She also became a symbol of modesty - Pudicitia and she was sometimes assigned the blue color of the Virgin Mary as in the 1527 painting by Jan Gossaert (Alte Pinakothek in Munich, 38) or in the miniature of Danaë-Pudicitia in the Vatican Fulgentius Metaforalis of about 1420 (compare "Art and Literature: Studies in Relationship" by William Sebastian Heckscher, Egon Verheyen, p. 170). Danaë was also depicted in the portrait of the princess's brother, King Ladislaus IV Vasa, painted by Peter Danckerts de Rij around 1640 (Alte Pinakothek in Munich, 6959). He stands in the gallery of his palace, most probably Villa Regia, and the painted frieze above the arcade is decorated with a fresco depicting naked Danaë. The fact that this fresco was selected in the portrait indicates that it was probably the most important or significant when the effigy of the king was created. Danaë and the golden rain as a talisman of an unmarried young woman are visible in several portraits of aunts of Princess Anna Catherine Constance by Martin Kober at the Germanisches Nationalmuseum in Nuremberg and at the Alte Pinakothek in Munich, most probably from the dowry of the princess and initially in her mother's dowry. Such nude depictions in mythological disguise were not a novelty in the 1630s, when the Stockholm painting was most likely created. Among the oldest, there are numerous representations of Diane de Poitiers, mistress of King Henry II of France, for example her portrait as the goddess Diana at rest by the School of Fontainebleau, produced around the middle of the 16th century, at the Musées de Senlis (D.V. 2006.0.30.1) or as Venus in the fresco of the League Tower (Tour de la Ligue) of Tanlay Castle, created after 1568. In 1634, Rembrandt produced a print with a very bold depiction of the biblical scene of Joseph and Potiphar's wife (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, RP-P-1961-999, many authors claim that he mainly painted his wife Saskia, so here they are probably right) and later, around 1660, Sir Peter Lely created possibly the only fully nude portrait painted in England in that century - portrait of Elizabeth Trentham (1640-1713), Viscountess Cullen, as Venus (oil on canvas, 129 x 196 cm, sold at Sotheby's London, February 15, 2018, lot 55). A nude image of the Queen of England is listed in the Wilanów Palace inventory of 1696 as "Portrait of the English Queen with bare head and undressed, in a modest frame" (Kontrfekt Krolowey Angielskiey z gołą głową bez Stroju spodem ramka prosta, No. 289., in Marywil). This inventory also mentions "The image of Daphna [Danaë], to which Jupiter descends in a golden rain, in black frames" (Obraz Dafny, do ktorey się Iupiter w złotym deszczu spuszcza, wramach czarnych, No. 95) in the Dutch Cabinet of the King, therefore very probably painted by a Dutch painter. Both paintings most likely come from older royal collections, perhaps even from the Villa Regia (in 1655 the royal couple managed to evacuate a small part of their collections to Silesia). The 1696 inventory of Villa Nova also lists "A painting of Helen [Henrietta Maria of France], Queen of England, in gilt frames" (Obraz Heleny Krolowey Angielskiey wramkach złocistych, No. 122) (after "Inwentarz Generalny 1696 z opracowaniem" by Anna Kwiatkowska). The adequacy of this register is generally quite fair, which is why the English queen had herself represented naked, most probably by van Dyck, especially for the monarchs of the Realm of Venus - Sarmatia. The indication of authorship of the Stockholm painting gives a comparison with a painting representing Salome with the head of Saint John the Baptist and servants, attributed to Alessandro Varotari (1588-1649), known as Il Padovanino (oil on canvas, 95.5 x 85.5 cm, sold at Casa d'Aste Babuino in Rome, July 18, 2023, lot 169). This painting is a copy of Titian's Raczyński Herodias, depicting Queen Catherine of Austria (1533-1572) as the biblical Salome, identified by me. The way in which the hands, draperies and face of the old woman were painted are very much alike. Varotari was active in Venice from 1614, where he moved from Padua. From 1615 to 1639 he was a member of the Venetian guild of painters (Fraglia dei pittori) and was frequently assisted by his sister Chiara Varotari (1584-1663). The painting has some similarities with the portrait of a lady, attributed to Chiara, in the Finnish National Gallery (A I 558). Who knows, maybe both visited Poland-Lithuania around 1639. Another similar Danaë with sleeping Cupid was sold in Munich where many objects brought by Anna Catherine Constance Vasa to Bavaria are kept in the Munich Residence (oil on canvas 119 x 179 cm, sold at Hampel Fine Art Auctions, September 22, 2022, lot 313). This painting is attributed to Giovanni Giacomo Sementi (1580-1640), a student of Denis Calvaert and Guido Reni, active in Bologna and Rome, where he found his mentor and admirer in the art-loving Cardinal Maurice of Savoy (1593-1657). Professor Daniele Benati assumes a collaboration with the Milanese-born Pier Francesco Cittadini, who worked in Rome in the 1630s. In the second half of the 1630s, the Polish-Lithuanian royal court's contacts with Italy were strong, as evidenced by King Ladislaus IV's letter of April 19, 1636 from Vilnius to Galileo requesting glasses for a telescope. In a letter dated July 11, 1637 addressed to Cardinal Barberini in Rome, the nuncio Mario Filonardi (1594-1644) reported that in Warsaw paintings and sculptures are in great demand because they were "rare and expensive" (rare e care). That is why the nuncio even tried, through Italian and Gdańsk merchants, to create a permanent maritime commercial connection between Gdańsk and Civitavecchia, near Rome. Ships from Gdańsk would carry raw materials from Poland, especially wax, and they would bring paintings and sculptures from Italy (after "Z dziejów polskiego mecenatu ..." by Władysław Tomkiewicz, p. 41). On the occasion of the king's wedding Carlo Possenti published in 1638 in Bologna his "Venus' friendship with Diana" (L'Amicizia di Venere con Diana, Epitalamio per le Nozze reali di Polonia). There must have been many likenesses of the princess by Italian painters. These probably survived due to their erotic nature.
Portrait of Queen Catherine of Austria (1533-1572) as Herodias (or Salome) with the head of Saint John the Baptist and servants by Alessandro Varotari after Titian, second quarter of the 17th century, Private collection.
Portrait of Crown Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651) as Danaë by Alessandro Varotari and his sister Chiara, ca. 1638-1639, Nationalmuseum in Stockholm.
Portrait of Crown Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651) as Danaë by Giovanni Giacomo Sementi and Pier Francesco Cittadini, ca. 1636-1640, Private collection.
Portraits of Ladislaus IV Vasa, his wife and sister by Adolf Boy
"Let Hymen decorate the palace, Behold, they bear the effigy of the Nymph: Juno, Minerva, Venus" (Hymen, decoretque palatia, Nymphæ Effigiem, ecce, ferunt Iuno, Minerva, Venus) is the inscription in Latin under a painting by Adolf Boy placed on the triumphal gate in Gdańsk in 1646 to celebrate the ceremonial entry of Marie Louise Gonzaga on February 11 that year.
This painting was reproduced in a print created by the Dutch engraver Willem Hondius and depicted the Judgment of King Ladislaus IV being offered the portrait of Marie Louise, lovingly painted by Cupid holding a palette and recommended by Juno, Venus and Minerva in reference to the mythological Judgement of Paris. The painting must have been truly magnificent because Hondius clearly marked the author in lower right part of the painting - ABoy pinxit (National Museum in Warsaw, Gr.Pol.5091 MNW). The second large triumphal arch near the Town Hall was also decorated with a painting by Boy representing the marriage of the king with the French princess, both crowned by a winged female figure of Fama, the deity of fame, and accompanied by a kneeling Cupid with two doves (Gr.Pol.5090 MNW), also signed: ABoy pinxit. The effigy of Marie Louise in this composition was most likely based on paintings or drawings sent from Paris or Warsaw, as it is rather unlikely that Boy traveled to the capital of France to paint the bride. The painter may also have participated in decorating two other temporary arches with movable statues of Atlas and Hercules (Gr.Pol.12874 MNW) and Apollo and Diana (National Library of Poland, G.1518), as he is credited as the author of the original design of the prints by Jeremias Falck Polonus. In 1649 Hondius also immortalized in an engraving another composition by Boy - Apotheosis of King John II Casimir Vasa, signed: Adolph Boy inventor (National Library of Poland, G.219/Sz.1). Around 1650, Falck also engraved six scenes from the deeds of Atlas and Hercules (Similitudines Emblematicæ), created by Boy, signed with the monogram AB in ligature (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, RP-P-2021-6074). Adolf or Adolph Boy was born in Gdańsk in 1612, probably the son of Magnus Boy (1559-1632). In the years 1620-1626, he studied painting with Bartholomeus Milwitz. From 1630 he was a member of the painters' guild and from 1636 a master, he then received citizenship of Gdańsk. In addition to the Italians Tommaso Dolabella and Giacinto Campana, the Silesian Bartholomeus Strobel, the Flemish Christian Melich, the Dutch Pieter Claesz Soutman, Peter Danckerts de Rij and Gilles Schalken, the Poles Krzysztof Gryniewski and Jakub Mieszkowski and two other painters from Gdańsk Samuel Wegener and Daniel Schultz, he was one of the painters of the royal court who called themselves "the painters of His Majesty" (pictor S. R. M.). Like Dolabella, Strobel and Gryniewski, for whom the texts of servitoral privileges were preserved in the Crown archives, he probably also had a formal royal servitorate. All of Boy's painted works, including the cycle of the twelve Sibyls from the Old Town Hall of Gdańsk (coming from the chapel of the Fichtl house), are attributed to him, because no work signed by the painter has been preserved. All his sure works are known thanks to engravings. He frequently painted portraits and in addition to the king and the queen, he created effigies of Constantine Ferber III (1580-1654), mayor and royal burgrave in Gdańsk (print by Jeremias Falck Polonus after original portrait from about 1635 or 1645, National Library of Poland, G.3057/I), Johannes Mochinger (1603-1652), professor of rhetoric at the Academic Gymnasium in Gdańsk (print by Falck, after original portrait from about 1646 or 1656, G.57649/II) and Christian Schweikert, mayor of Gdańsk (print by Johann Bensheimer from 1668, G.507/sz). As court painter to such a renowned patron as King Ladislaus IV, Boy must have been an eminent painter, comparable to Strobel and Danckerts de Rij, who also created several royal effigies. The mentioned engravings could give an impression of his style. While in his print Christ crowned with thorns (National Library of Poland, G.24580/Sz, signed: Ant. van dijck pinxit / J. falck fecit), produced between 1639 and 1646, Falck attempted to imitate the Anthony van Dyck's soft brushwork through longer crossed lines, in the portraits of Ferber and Mochinger he used more dots and shorter lines, so the images appear slightly jagged. A very finely painted portrait of an old man, attributed to Adolf Boy, now in the Museum of Gdańsk (oil on canvas, 114 x 87.5 cm, MHMG/S/129), gives the same impression. The model is identified as the theologian and pastor Aegidius Strauch (1632-1682), who from 1669 was parish priest of the Holy Trinity Church and rector of the Academic Gymnasium in Gdańsk, due to his close resemblance to the portrait of Strauch by Andreas Stech (Boy's pupil), also reproduced in a print by Elias Hainzelmann. However, if we consider the Latin inscription in the upper right corner to be original and correct, the model could not be Strauch, because the man was born in 1609 and was 72 years old in 1681 (Jesus Christus / est Spes et vita mea / Ao 1609, Natus 1 Marty. / Ao 1681 Piet 1 Marty. / Ætatis 72.). Boy, who died in 1682 or 1683, was active until the end of his days since in 1680 he created a signed view of Gdańsk (after "Artificium extra ideam ..." by Maria Bartko, p. 34). Among the royal portraits which follow the same convention and are very similar in style to Boy's purported portrait of Strauch is the full-length portrait of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria in the Nationalmuseum in Stockholm (oil on canvas, 218 x 138 cm, NMGrh 1417), portrait of her husband King Ladislaus IV Vasa at the Royal Castle in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 200 x 120 cm, ZKW 559 dep., deposit of the National Museum in Warsaw, 128758) and portrait of her sister-in-law Crown Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa at Ambras Castle (oil on canvas, 115 x 96.5 cm, GG 5611), identified by me. The queen's portrait is signed in Latin in the lower left corner (CÆCILIA RENATA REGINA / POLONIÆ ET SVECIÆ) while the part stating that she is the queen of Poland and Sweden was partially covered by a frame, indicating that the canvas has been cut. It was probably the same for the portrait of Ladislaus, which also bore a false inscription identifying the model as Gustavus Adolphus, King of Sweden and attribution to Joachim von Sandrart (Gustavus Adolph / König von Schwed / Anno 1632 / Sandrart pinxit / Nürnberg). The identification as King of Poland today is not disputed and the attribution to Sandrart is rejected (compare "Portrait of Władysław IV from the Oval Gallery ..." by Monika Kuhnke, Jacek Żukowski, p. 61-67). The portrait was purchased from J. Jarocki in 1947 as a portrait of Ladislaus IV and another version is kept in the Lviv Historical Museum (oil on canvas, 69 x 59 cm, Ж-645). The copy comes from the collection of Władysław Łoziński, who bought it on January 6, 1912 from Szymon Schwartz's antique dealer for 370 crowns. Although attributed to a painter from the end of the 18th century and inspired by a lost original, the style of the Lviv painting is particularly close to the portraits of Christina Kiszczyna née Drutska-Sokolinska preserved at the National Museum of art of Vilnius (LNDM T 3990) and Queen Bona Sforza of Aragona in the National Museum of Lublin (S/Mal/609/ML), most probably painted by Giacinto Campana. The court painters often needed to cooperate and copy the works of other painters, thus drawing inspiration from their style. For example, for his portrait of Queen Bona, painted for the Marble Room at the Royal Castle in Warsaw, Peter Danckerts de Rij probably copied an effigy by Cranach the Younger. The great diversity of the court of Ladislaus IV, great destruction and dispersion of their oeuvre, as well as the absence of signatures, are other factors hindering the attribution of many works of art related to the Polish-Lithuanian Vasas. The portrait of the king in Warsaw and that of the queen in Stockholm, have similar dimensions and composition, and they were obviously painted by the same painter, so it is possible that they originally formed a pair or that they come from the series of royal effigies created at the same time. In the Warsaw portrait, the pastel colors and beauty of the painting contrast sharply with the lack of idealization and the small head of the king, as if the painter was intentionally contrasting the beauty of his art, the jewelry and fabrics with the model defects. This became his trademark, as can also be said of the portrait of Ladislaus's wife and sister and other similar works, such as the portraits of Elżbieta (Halszka) Kazanowska née Słuszczanka (1619-1671) in solana hat (National Museum in Warsaw, 34661, lost) and with forget-me-nots (National Museum in Warsaw, M.Ob.2510), and the portrait of Alexander Louis Radziwill (1594-1654), Grand Marshal of Lithuania (Nieborów Palace, NB 974 MNW).
Portrait of King Ladislaus IV Vasa (1595-1648) by Giacinto Campana or circle, ca. 1639-1642, Lviv Historical Museum.
Portrait of King Ladislaus IV Vasa (1595-1648) holding a cane by Adolf Boy, ca. 1639-1642, Royal Castle in Warsaw.
Portrait of Queen Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria (1611-1644) holding a fan by Adolf Boy, ca. 1639-1642, Nationalmuseum in Stockholm.
Portrait of Crown Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651) holding a fan by Adolf Boy, ca. 1639-1642, Ambras Castle in Innsbruck.
Portrait of an old man, possibly pastor Aegidius Strauch (1632-1682) by Adolf Boy, ca. 1681, Museum of Gdańsk.
Portraits of Prince John Casimir Vasa
"His works and famous testimonies of craftsmanship [artis praeclara specimina] created in Our kingdom […], to everyone who has come close, give a pleasant feeling of beauty and adornment flowing from the surfaces painted by him. With this letter, We make him a painter at our court", stated in the servitorial letter issued in 1639 to the Silesian painter Bartholomeus Strobel King Ladislaus IV Vasa (after "Portrait of Władysław IV from the Oval Gallery ..." by Monika Kuhnke, Jacek Żukowski, p. 68). The king met Strobel in Gdańsk at the end of 1634. Over the next few years the artist lived and worked alternately in Gdańsk, Toruń and Elbląg, simultaneously being employed in decorating the interior of the royal chapel of St. Casimir in Vilnius (1636-37).
On June 25, 1635, in the face of a new war with Sweden, the king's half-brother John Casimir Vasa arrived to Toruń. Under the command of Hetman Stanisław Koniecpolski, about 24,000 selected soldiers with strong artillery were concentrated in Pomerania in the camp near Sztum. From there the prince went to Vienna for the wedding of his relative Archduchess Maria Anna of Austria (1610-1665), the daughter of Emperor Ferdinand II, and Maximilian I (1573-1651), Duke of Bavaria (15 July 1635). He received under his command a regiment of cuirassiers and Polish volunteers, with whom he went to the front of the Thirty Years' War in Alsace. He returned to the country after Ladislaus IV concluded the truce in Sztumska Wieś on September 12, 1635. When despite the imperial promises, he did not receive a feudal principality, and the Sejm did not grant him the Duchy of Courland, he accepted the proposal of his cousin Philip IV of Spain to become the viceroy of Portugal, where he was to receive an annual salary and get married. On this trip, he stopped in France, where he was arrested on the orders of Cardinal Richelieu on suspicion of espionage for Spain. He was a prisoner from May 10, 1638 to February 1640, when he was released after the intervention of the Polish legation that came to Paris. After release he went to Paris, where he met Princess Marie Louise Gonzaga de Nevers, with whom he had an affair. In 1641 John Casimir decided to become a Jesuit. In 1642, he left the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth again, accompanying his sister to Germany. In 1643 he joined the Jesuits despite the opposition of King Ladislaus, causing a diplomatic rift between Poland and the Pope. John Casimir became a cardinal, but in December 1646, finding himself unworthy of spiritual life, he resigned as a cardinal and returned to Poland. Following the death of Cecilia Renata of Austria, first wife of Ladislaus IV in 1644, Cardinal Jules Mazarin insisted that Marie Louise should marry the widowed sovereign to destroy the alliance between the Polish Vasa dynasty and the Habsburg dynasty, the rivals of the French state. She married Ladislaus by proxy on 5 November 1645. Two years later, on 20 May 1648, Marie Louise was widowed by the sudden death of Ladislaus IV. John Casimir was eventually elected the next King of Poland by the nobility, and married her on 30 May 1649. In the Alte Pinakothek in Munich there is portrait of a young man in a fashionable French slashed doublet from around 1635 (oil on canvas, 224.5 x 135.5 cm, inventory number 6969). It was transferred in 1804 from the collection of the Palatine Castle in Neuburg an der Donau. This painting is very symilar in style, pose of the sitter and costume to the portrait of king Ladislaus IV Vasa with a crown by Bartholomeus Strobel (attributed), which was before 1939 in the Sandomierski/Brühl Palace in Warsaw and dated to around 1635, as well as to the portrait of Władysław Dominik Zasławski-Ostrogski, also by Strobel, from about 1635 in National Art Museum of Belarus in Minsk (a copy of the painting in the Wilanów Palace in Warsaw). Very similar costume is also visible in the portrait of Prince Janusz Radziwill (1612-1655), painted by David Bailly in 1632 (National Museum in Wrocław). The man bear a striking resemblance to the portrait of Prince John Casimir Vasa when a Cardinal, created by a painter in Rome in about 1646 (Pontificia Università Gregoriana) and several engravings depicting John Casimir, when the King of Poland (by Willem Hondius, published in Gdańsk in 1648, by Hugo Allard the Elder, published in Amsterdam after 1648 and by Philipp Kilian, published in Augsburg after 1648). Therefore the described painting from the Neuburg Castle undoubtedly comes from a dowry of Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651), Countess Palatine of Neuburg and John Casimir Vasa's sister. Another portrait, most probably also from Anna Catherine Constance Vasa's dowry, is today in the Imperial Castle in Nuremberg (deposit of the Germanisches Nationalmuseum, oil on canvas, 210 x 137 cm, NbgKbg.L-G0006 / 6784). It was previously identified as effigy of Emperor Leopold I (1640-1705) and as such published as a chromolithograph by Jakob Heinrich von Hefner-Alteneck in 1879. This painting is very similar to Prince John Casimir 's portrait in Gripsholm Castle in Sweden, a miniature in the Bavarian National Museum and another portrait, which was before World War II in the Herzog-Max-Burg Palace in Munich (watercolor painting after original by Aleksander Lesser from mid-19th century is in the National Museum in Warsaw). All these paintings were created by Peter Danckers de Rij and his workshop in about 1638 on the occasion of receiving the Order of the Golden Fleece from king Philip IV of Spain, head of the order from 1621. The same man was also depicted in a portrait from the old collection of the palace of the French kings in the Louvre (oil on canvas, 65.3 x 54.5 cm, INV 20345). It is attributed to a French painter and dated to about 1635-1640 basing on the style and sitter's costume. The painting was most probaly created in the atelier of Philippe de Champaigne (1602-1674), who from 1628, when he entered the service of Queen Mother Marie de Medicis, was a court painter of the French kings. Prince John Casimir was a prisoner and as such cannot be represented with the Order of the Golden Fleece, as France was at that time at war with Spain. His costume and hairstyle are very similar to those shown on the silver medal with his bust, created before 1638 (Museum of Warsaw, MHW 24241). It is also possible that the portrait was created by an Italian or a Flemish painter and brought by the prince with him to France, as John Casimir travelled to many European countries between 1635 and 1638. Engraving entitled in French L'Hyver (Winter) with Proserpine and Pluto by Jeremias Falck Polonus and Jean Leblond I (Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen), was published between 1639-1645. Proserpine and Pluto, who abducted her into the underworld, bearing the features of both Marie Louise and John Casimir is undoubtedly an allusion to the secret affair of the Queen and the Prince. Gdańsk born engraver who called himself Polish (Polonus) created this print in Paris, where he moved in 1639. Fragment of four lines of French letterpress verse at left, and their Latin translation at right, reads "Pluto burns a secret fire for Proserpine" (Pluton d'un feu secret brusle pour Proserpine).
Portrait of king Ladislaus IV Vasa with a crown by Bartholomeus Strobel, ca. 1635, Sandomierski Palace in Warsaw, lost during World War II. Virtual reconstruction, © Marcin Latka
Portrait of Prince John Casimir Vasa by Bartholomeus Strobel or workshop, ca. 1635, Alte Pinakothek in Munich.
Portrait of Prince John Casimir Vasa by Peter Danckers de Rij, ca. 1638, Imperial Castle in Nuremberg.
Portrait of Prince John Casimir Vasa by workshop of Philippe de Champaigne (?), 1635-1640, Louvre Museum.
L'Hyver (Winter) with Proserpine and Pluto by Jeremias Falck Polonus and Jean Leblond I, 1639-1645, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen.
Portraits of Anna Catherine Constance Vasa and Cecilia Renata of Austria by Frans Luycx
"As soon as the king entered the castle and got out of the carriage, the archduke came towards the king as far as the stairs, and with him one distinguished Austrian lord Meggau, a knight of the golden fleece, who was in great favor with the Emperor's father. The archduke apologized to the king that the empress did not come downstairs, and this was because of her health while she was pregnant. Then the empress came down and stopped in the middle of the stairs, whole dressed in pearls. The king from the journey, but he was also dressed expensive, and so did the queen and princess. The king spoke to the empress in Italian, who received him pleasantly and answered him briefly in Spanish. She then embraced the queen very pleasantly, and she squeezed the princess so tightly that her pearl earrings with the princess's earrings tangled that they had to be torn off", recalled the greeting of King Ladislaus IV Vasa, his wife Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria and his sister Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa with their cousin Empress Maria Anna of Spain (1606-1646) in Vienna on September 1, 1638, Jakub Sobieski (1591-1646), voivode of Belz, in his Diary.
Ladislaus went to Austria to be treated for gout in Baden near Vienna. The king and his retinue of 1,300 people, "who need more for a month than the entire imperial court for six months", according to Sobieski, departured from Warsaw on August 5, 1638. Known for his artistic taste, during trip to the Netherlands and Italy in 1624-1625, he visited, among others, the studios of Peter Paul Rubens, Guido Reni and Guercino, Ladislaus probably visited the atelier of the leading portrait painter at the imperial court, Frans Luycx, during his visit to Vienna. Much earlier, however, he had noticed the great talent of the Flemish painter, because the accounts preserved in Stockholm confirm Ladislaus' contacts with a painter named Luix as early as 1637. Most likely in 1637, when she became empress, Luycx created a series of portrait sof Maria Anna of Spain which were sent to her relatives. Two very similar are in the Visitandines Monastery in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 196 x 145 cm) and in the Gripsholm Castle near Stockholm (inventory number NMGrh 1221), both probably originally sent to Warsaw as a gift to the king and his sister, like the two identical paintings in Madrid (Prado Museum, inventory number P04169 and P001272). Probably during this visit Ladislaus commissioned a series of his effigies, and portraits of his wife and sister. The 1640 settlement says about the payment by Polish agent in Vienna to "Leic, painter, for three effigies" (after "Obrazy z warsztatu Fransa Luycxa w kolekcji wilanowskiej" by Jacek Żukowski). Preserved portraits of the king by Luycx are in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna (oil on canvas, 203.5 x 140.5 cm, GG 7150), Alte Pinakothek in Munich and reduced version in the Wilanów Palace in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 106 x 86 cm, Wil.1143). The portrait of Cecilia Renata of Austria is also in Wilanów (pendant to king's portrait, oil on canvas, 100.8 x 90 cm, Wil.1144) and in Vienna (inscription on the back in Italian: LA REGINA CECILIA RENATA DI POLONIA 1642, inventory number GG 8291). Inventory of Leopold Wilhelm's collection from 1659 lists two effigies of his sister Queen of Poland by Luycx, one when Archduchess with a parrot (indianischer raab, number 813), the second as a Queen with a crown and sceptre on a table (number 811), both probably lost. In turn Cecilia Renata and the king of Poland also undoubtedly owned portraits of Leopold Wilhelm from this period and a miniature in the Czartoryski Museum in Kraków (oil on copper, 5.4 x 4.3 cm, XII-71), painted in Luycx's style and similar to Archduke's portrait in the Kunsthistorisches Museum (GG 2754) and his full length portrait by Luycx in the Gripsholm Castle (NMGrh 1876), can be considered as such. As in Vienna or Madrid, many of Luycx's works were undoubtedly in the Polish-Lithuanian royal-grand ducal collections, but before the Second World War in Warsaw there were only two that could be considered to be by the master himself - mentioned portrait of Empress Maria Anna and portrait of King Ladislaus IV, which was however purchased in 1936 in Vienna. The portrait of the king was kept until 1945 at the Brühl (Sandomierski) Palace in Warsaw and was lost during the war (oil on canvas, 202 x 140 cm). Luycx and his workshop must have produced multiple versions of this effigy of the king because the inventory of the imperial gallery in Prague dating from 1718 mentions a portrait of Ladislaus IV by Luycx in "white boots" (weiszen stiefeln). The Prague portrait measured approximately 251 x 144 cm, so it was larger than those in Vienna (which is now considered to be this painting from Prague) and Warsaw, probably cut off in the upper part, and comparable to the Munich painting (Alte Pinakothek, oil on canvas, 250 x 160 cm, 4197, inscription: VLADISLAVS IIII. REX POLONIÆ). The Munich painting comes from Neuburg Castle and was therefore probably originally in the dowry of the king's sister Anna Catherine Constance. Miniature portrait of a woman attributed to Spanish painter in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London (oil on copper, 5.7 x 5.1 cm, P.57-1929) is stylistically very similar to described miniature of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm in the Czartoryski Museum. The woman bears strong resemblemnce to portraits of Archduke's sister, Cecilia Renata, especially mentioned portrait in Vienna by workshop of Frans Luycx (GG 8291). The Spanish style elements of her outfit, like earrings, may be the influence of the Spanish entourage of her sister-in-law, Empress Maria Anna of Spain. Archduke Leopold Wilhelm also owned a portrait of Princess Anna Catherine Constance described in the inventory of his collection under number 812: "A life-size effigy in oil on canvas of the princess of Poland, who was married to the duke of Neuburg. In a black smooth frame, 11 feet 3 fingers high and 7 feet wide. By Francisco Leüx Original" (Ein Contrafait lebensgrosz von Öhlfarb auf Leinwaeth der Princessin ausz Pohlen, welche mit dem Herzogen von Neüburg verheürath gewest. In einer schwartz glatten Ramen, hoch 11 Spann 3 Finger unndt 7 Spann braith. Von Francisco Leüx Original). The full length portrait by Frans Luycx in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna (oil on canvas, 222 x 111 cm, GG 1732) is identified as effigy of Queen Cecilia Renata, however, like in portraits of Ladislaus IV, Empress Maria Anna or a portrait of Cecilia Renata mentioned in Archduke's inventory, there is no insignia (crown and scepter) in this portrait and the woman bears no resemblance to other effigies of the Queen. On the other hand the woman resemble greatly effigies of Princess Anna Catherine Constance, especially her portrait in a red dress at Ambras Castle. This image may therefore be tantamount to an entry in the Archduke's inventory. A reduced copy of this painting by Luycx's workshop is also in the Kunsthistorisches Museum (oil on canvas, 90 x 50 cm, GG 7944).
Portrait of King Ladislaus IV Vasa (1595-1648) by Frans Luycx, ca. 1638-1642, Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
Portrait of King Ladislaus IV Vasa (1595-1648) by Frans Luycx, ca. 1638-1642, Sandomierski Palace in Warsaw, lost.
Portrait of King Ladislaus IV Vasa (1595-1648) by Frans Luycx, ca. 1638-1642, Alte Pinakothek in Munich.
Portrait of King Ladislaus IV Vasa (1595-1648) by workshop of Frans Luycx, ca. 1638-1642, Wilanów Palace in Warsaw.
Portrait of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria (1611-1644) by workshop of Frans Luycx, ca. 1638-1642, Wilanów Palace in Warsaw.
Portrait of Empress Maria Anna of Spain (1606-1646) by Frans Luycx, ca. 1638-1642, Monastery of Visitandines in Warsaw.
Portrait of Crown Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651) by Frans Luycx, 1638-1642, Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
Portrait of Crown Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651) by workshop of Frans Luycx, 1638-1642, Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
Miniature portrait of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria (1611-1644) by Frans Luycx, 1638-1642, Victoria and Albert Museum in London.
Miniature portrait of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria (1614-1662) by Frans Luycx, 1638-1642, Czartoryski Museum in Kraków.
Portraits of Anna Catherine Constance Vasa and Cecilia Renata of Austria as Venus Verticordia by Giacinto Campana
In 1625, during his stay in Bologna, Prince Ladislaus Sigismund Vasa visited the studios of local painters, Guido Reni and Guercino. He brought to Poland from this journey, apart from works of art purchased in the Netherlands and Italy, also valuable gifts, including paintings by Italian masters from the famous gallery in Mantua, donated to him by Prince Gonzaga. When he become king he continued to purchase paintings abroad, mainly in the Netherlands, but also in Italy, throuh his secretary Virgilio Puccitelli, a castrato singer and composer. It was Puccitelli, who acquired the services of several singers in Venice for the king between September 1638 and February 1640, who brought to Warsaw "The Rape of Europa" by Guido Reni for which the king expressed his gratitiude in a letter to Reni dated March 3, 1640. "Therefore, we make You aware of all this and enclose the expression of our most obliging intentions, so that You know how much to expect from them and how much we respect your bright talent", wrote the king. This painting is today in the National Gallery in London.
In 1637 Ladislaus invited to Poland Giacinto Campana from Bologna, who worked at the Polish court until at least 1646. Recommended by the former apostolic nuncio to the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, Bishop Antonio Santacroce (1599-1641) and the new nuncio Mario Filonardi (1594-1644), the painter came to Warsaw from Rome via Venice in the spring of 1637. He was employed to decorate different royal residencies and Saint Casimir's Chapel at the Vilnius Cathedral in July 1639, as well as, together with Giovanni Battista Gisleni and Christian Melich, in stage decorations for Royal Opera in Warsaw and Vilnius. Campana, trained first with Francesco Brizio, then with Francesco Albani, worked as an assistant to Guido Reni and painted the copy of Guido's Abduction of Helen in 1631 for Cardinal Bernardino Spada with his master's retouching (Galleria Spada in Rome). Before World War II in Bode-Museum in Berlin, there was painting of Feeding the multitude, which in the inventory of the collection of Vincenzo Giustiniani from 1638 it is attributed to Campana (Un quadro grande col miracolo di Christo della distribuzione di cinque pani, e dui pesci dipinto in tela, alta palmi 12 lar. 7 -in circa di mano del Campana senza cornice). Two paintings in Palazzo Malvezzi de' Medici in Bologna depicting the Death of Saint Joseph and Martyrdom of Saint Ursula from the Hospital of the Little Bastards (Ospedale dei Bastardini) are also attributed to him. In Poland the work which could be attributed to circle of Guido Reni is a portrait of Ladislaus IV Vasa in a cuirass from the collection of the Wawel Royal Castle in Kraków, purchased in 2013 in Italy. It was most likely Campana who created a copy of Guido Reni's Cupids fighting putti from the Czartoryski collection (inventory number MNK XII-228). The original by Reni, today in the Galleria Doria Pamphilj in Rome, was created in about 1625. Among other works that can be attributed to Campana is the Temptation of Saint Benedict (Saint Benedict throwing himself into the thornbush) in the Lithuanian National Museum of Art (oil on canvas, 145 x 173 cm, LNDM T 927), similar to a painting attributed to Felice Ficherelli in the Slovak National Gallery (O 5476) and two paintings in the Wilanów Palace in Warsaw - Night (oil on canvas, 166.5 x 219.5 cm, Wil.1060), inspired by La Notte by Guercino, and Saint Mary Magdalene (oil on canvas, 68.5 x 58 cm, Wil.1732), close to certain works by Guercino and his workshop, such as Saint John the Baptist (Vatican Museums) or Penitent Magdalene (Capitoline Museums). Cupid holding his bow, a fragment of Campana's larger composition depicting the Abduction of Helen, is now in the Nieborów Palace (oil on canvas, 75 x 65 cm, NB 964). It comes from the collection of the Catholic branch of the Radziwill family and is considered to be a work by a 19th century Polish painter. Campana obviously frequently used compositional templates from other painters. In the royal Wilanów Palace, there is a painting entitled Education of Cupid (oil on canvas, 134 x 166 cm, Wil.1548), which most probably comes from the old collection of the palace. This painting is a copy of Titian's Venus blindfolding Cupid in National Gallery of Art in Washington (before the painting was cut), which is a portrait of Queen Catherine of Austria (1533-1572) as Venus Verticordia (Turner of Hearts). It is however not an exact copy, the painter only borrowed the composition, but the woman depicted as Venus is different. She bears great resemblance to effigies of Ladislaus IV's sister Crown Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651). The style of this painting is very similar to the the aforementioned painting of the Death of Saint Joseph by Giacinto Campana. Very similar composition, painted in the same style, is in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. Like in Warsaw version the woman has her breast uncovered, but her face is also different from both mentioned paintings, the original by Titian and the copy in the Wilanów Palace. Her image with an elongated hooked nose and large lips is very similar to the portrait of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria in Vienna (inventory number 8291) and etched effigies of the queen. This painting, depicting Cecilia Renata as Venus Verticordia, created in Warsaw, was therefore sent to the queen's relatives in Vienna. What is interesting Fortuna Virilis (or her assistant), an aspect or manifestation of the goddess Fortuna, who had the power to conceal the physical imperfections of women from the eyes of men and associated with Venus Verticordia, has the features similar to the princess and the queen respectively.
Allegory with portrait of Crown Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651) as Venus Verticordia (Turner of Hearts) by Giacinto Campana, 1637-1642, Wilanów Palace in Warsaw.
Allegory with portrait of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria (1611-1644) as Venus Verticordia (Turner of Hearts) by Giacinto Campana, 1637-1642, Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
Cupids fighting putti by Giacinto Campana after Guido Reni, ca. 1637-1650, Czartoryski Museum.
Cupid holding his bow by Giacinto Campana or follower, after 1637, Nieborów Palace.
Portrait of Ladislaus IV Vasa in a cuirass by Simone Cantarini
The opera "Saint Alexius" (Il S. Alessio : dramma musicale : dall'eminentissimo, et reverendissimo signore card. Barberino, fatto rappresentare al serenissimo prencipe Alessandro Carlo di Polonia), performed on January 19, 1634 at the Palazzo Canceleria in Rome, was one of the splendid events honoring the visit of Prince Alexander Charles Vasa, half-brother of elected King Ladislaus IV Vasa, during the Carnival in the Eternal City. This opera in three acts was composed by Stefano Landi in 1631 to a libretto by Giulio Rospigliosi (the future Pope Clement IX), and the scenography was probably the work of Gianlorenzo Bernini.
It was followed by another splendid event in Piazza Navona - Saracino Festival or Giostra del Saracino (a "Saracen" joust or tournament), held on 25 February 1634. Celebrations were prepared under the auspices of Cardinal Antonio Barberini the Younger (1607-1671) or Antonio Barberini iuniore to distinguish him from his uncle Antonio Marcello Barberini (1569-1646). The Barberini spared no money to honor the Polish-Lithuanian prince (the Saracen joust cost the fabulous sum of 60,000 scudi). They probably wanted to show the guest the splendor of their rule in the Papal States or even overshadow the solemn entry of the Commonweath's legation of Jerzy Ossoliński into the Eternal City, which took place a few months earlier, on November 27, 1633. Jan Sobieski, future king, recalled Ossoliński's mission to Pope Urban VIII Barberini, believing that Rome had never seen anything more famous and more glorious. The painters Andrea Sacchi (1599-1661) and Simone Cantarini (1612-1648), clients of the Barberini house, were undobtedly employed in many jobs, as well as Antonio Barberini the Younger's lover, the castrato singer Marc'Antonio Pasqualini (1614-1691). The famous soprano, as a castrato en travesti, played major roles in Sant'Alessio in 1631, 1632 and 1634, including Sposa (Alexius's wife). As the revenues of the papacy from the Commonweath were considerable, good relations with the ruling house of Poland-Lithuania were important. Ossoliński gave the Pope many valuable gifts, including Flemish tapestries made for King Sigismund II Augustus. The Barberinis undoubtedly also reciprocated with gifts, but today we can only imagine how many beautiful works of Roman Baroque found their way to Poland-Lithuania at that time. In October 1643, they also honored the king's other half-brother, Prince John Casimir Vasa (future king), who decided to become a cardinal. In 1641, Sacchi, who decorated Capuchin church in Rome and the Palazzo Barberini for Cardinal Antonio Barberini the Younger, created a beautiful portrait of Pasqualini crowned by the naked god of music and the arts Apollo. Cantarini is in turn credited with creating several portraits of Antonio the Younger around 1633. Both painters are frequently linked to Guido Reni (1575-1642), active in Bologna in the Papal States, whose studio Ladislaus Vasa visited in 1625. Presumably around 1634 Cantarini joined Reni's workshop and around 1639 returned to Rome. In Poland, there is a beautiful Allegory of Painting by Cantarini (National Museum in Warsaw, 126263), acquired in 1938 from the Boschi collection in Bologna (a copy is in the Fondazione Cavallini Sgarbi). A painting by Cantarini is mentioned in the 1835 catalogue of paintings from the Radziwll collection: "99. Venus jokes with Cupid, having taken his bow, she holds it up; Cupid eagerly reaches for it. - Painted on copper" (after "Katalog galeryi obrazow sławnych mistrzów ..." by Antoni Blank, p. 34). Paintings close to the style of Cantarini and Sacchi were before the Second World War in the collection of Count Juliusz Tarnowski in the magnificent Renaissance palace of Sucha Beskidzka (oil on canvas, 99 x 74 cm). They were attributed to another student of Reni Francesco Albani or to his workshop and represented the Toilet of Venus and the Toilet of Diana. Another work close to Cantarini can be found in the former royal palace of Wilanów in Warsaw. It is attributed to the Bolognese school of the 17th century and represents Saint Sebastian (oil on canvas, 53 x 35 cm, Wil.1033). In addition to being considered the third patron saint of Rome, since the Renaissance, this saint has been an enduring symbol for the expression of homosexual feelings and "usually suppressed homosexual fantasies" (after "Lesbian and Gay Writing" by Mark Lilly, p. 206). Cardinal Antonio the Younger owned the Mystical Marriage of Saint Catherine with Saint Sebastian by Correggio (Louvre Museum, INV 41; MR 162), offered to Cardinal Mazarin during his exile in Paris. The naked young man in a drawing attributed to Cantarini (Metropolitan Museum of Art, 69.1), could be a study for a disguised portrait of Cardinal Antonio as Saint John the Baptist or Saint Sebastian, as it greatly resembles the Cardinal's effigies by this painter. The Wilanów painting is comparable to Cantarini's very sensual Saint Sebastian and an angel, painted between 1632 and 1648 (sold at Cambi Casa d'Aste in Genoa, December 13, 2019, lot 170), and his drawings - Saint Sebastian (Cornell College, Edward Sonnenschein Collection, 48) and naked Saint Sebastian crowned by an angel, study for an etching (Nationalmuseum in Stockholm, NMH 1252/1863), both from the late 1630s. Unfortunately, its earlier history is not known, but this does not exclude that the painting was transferred to Poland before the Deluge (1655-1660). The history of art in the majority of European countries commemorates the genius of artists and the generosity of their patrons. In Poland, however, it is often linked to the darkest periods of human history and sometimes causes controversy. The wonderful heritage of the Realm of Venus perished with each war and invasion. Italians have long forgotten how much profit brought them fruitful trade with the Commonwealth and how many portraits of Polish-Lithuanian monarchs and aristocrats they owned, like the portrait of a young man in eastern costume, most likely a Ruthenian nobleman (Pinacoteca Ambrosiana in Milan), identified by me. Due to the massive destruction of their heritage, the Sarmatians have also forgotten how much their culture owes to distant Italy (especially when it comes to portraiture). When the Commonewath became impoverished after the wars, the inflow of newcomers from Italy was stopped, and the members of the Italian community who survived the invasion were quickly Polonized, and even foreign-sounding surnames were transformed, obliterating the traces of Italian origin. For example, in the municipal registers of Lublin from the 17th century, surnames such as: Gilberti, Grimaldi, Mureni, Mineto, Negroni, Simi are mentioned. Rudgier de Sacellis, his brother Daniel de Sacellis, Jerzy Cyboni, Krzysztof Cyboni, Michał Pelikan-Klimuntowicz (Climunta), Flawiusz Marchetti and Antoni Nosadyni were mayors of Lublin. There were Italian barbers (Franciszek Grimaldi, Franciszek Raymundi), doctors (Castelli), painters (Jakub Tebaldi) and stonemasons (Florian Dydzudes de Saltre). Italians were also engaged in pharmacy (Marian of Catania), goldsmithing (Gilbertii Georgius), and tailoring (Joanes Dziano Olsan) (after "Lublin w dziejach i kulturze Polski" by Tadeusz Radzik, p. 259). One of these long-forgotten royal effigies was the portrait of King Ladislaus IV Vasa with the Order of the Golden Fleece, wearing a breastplate and holding the staff. The portrait was purchased by Wawel Royal Castle in Italy in 2013 from a private collector. Influences from Reni's oeuvre are noticeable, but the style of this painting bears a striking resemblance to that of the portrait of Cardinal Antonio iuniore with pentimento (earlier image of a young woman) visible on the cardinal's mozzetta, painted by Simone Cantarini around 1633 (sold at Sotheby's London, July 4, 1990, lot 74). It also resembles other portrait of the cardinal by Cantarini (Palazzo Barberini in Rome, inv. 1068), as well as the mentioned Allegory of Painting. It is very possible that Antonio, who shared with Ladislas IV a passion for art and opera, commissioned this portrait or received a copy of a painting sent to Poland-Lithuania. The style of the effigy of the king's half-brother - John Casimir, which is still in Rome at the Polish Hospice (oil on canvas, 98 x 73 cm), is very similar. It is a copy or a version of a portrait of John Casimir as a cardinal produced by the workshop of Giovanni Antonio Galli, known as lo Spadarino (attributed by me), today at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. It has a Latin inscription in the lower part (CASIMIRVS SOC[ietatis] IESU S[anctae] R[omanae] E[cclesiae] CARDINALIS ET / POLONIE REX) and, before the Second World War, this painting was in the Church of the Gesù (Il Gesù), prototype of a Jesuit church, consecrated in 1584 (compare "Kościół polski w Rzymie ..." by Józef Skrabski, p. 299). Cantarini and Spadarino copied each other their works or received the same set of study drawings to create their paintings.
Portrait of Ladislaus IV Vasa in a cuirass by Simone Cantarini, 1637-1644, Wawel Royal Castle in Kraków.
Portrait of Prince-Cardinal John Casimir Vasa (1609-1672) by Simone Cantarini, ca. 1648, Polish Hospice in Rome.
Saint Sebastian by Simone Cantarini, 1630s, Wilanów Palace in Warsaw.
The Toilet of Venus by Andrea Sacchi or Simone Cantarini, 1630s, Sucha Beskidzka Castle, lost.
The Toilet of Diana by Andrea Sacchi or Simone Cantarini, 1630s, Sucha Beskidzka Castle, lost.
Portrait of Prince Christopher Radziwill holding a cane by Govert Flinck
After 1637, Prince Christopher II Radziwill (1585-1640), Grand Hetman of Lithuania transformed his main residence, Birzai Castle, into a Dutch-style bastioned fortress. This fortified palace, initially in Italian style (palazzo in fortezza), built for his father by the architect Franceso Mineto (Franciszek Minet) between 1586-1589, was destroyed in 1625 by Swedish troops led by King Gustavus Adolphus. The Swedes stole all the property and 60 cannons. When the castle was returned to the Radziwills in 1627, the structure was badly damaged and could no longer be inhabited. Christopher therefore built a temporary wooden palace in Birzai.
The reconstruction was supervised by Cornelius Keyzer from Vilnius, possibly a relative of the Dutch sculptor and architect Hendrick de Keyser (1565-1621), and the main architect was Cornelius Retenburg from Tartu (Dorpat). Many materials for the construction work were imported, such as cement brought via Riga, probably from the Netherlands, as well as roof tiles made in Haarlem (Keyser insisted on harlimskie roof tiles during reconstruction works in 1612) (after "Jak Krzysztof Radziwiłł (1585–1640) dwory i zbory budował ..." by Jarosław Zawadzki, p. 28, 38, 41). Unfortunately, in the fall of 1655, the Birzai fortress again fell into the hands of the Swedes and after further reconstruction after the Deluge, in 1704 during another Swedish invasion, the troops of General Adam Ludwig Lewenhaupt (1659-1719) blew up the palace and the fortress. The Hetman also had several residences in Vilnius. The most important and oldest was the palace inherited by his nephew Boguslaus (Christopher was his guardian until 1636), later known as the Boguslaus Palace. It was located near the Palace of the Grand Dukes of Lithuania and the Cathedral. In 1506, Nicolaus II Radziwill (d. 1509) founded a Gothic church dedicated to Saint George and Our Lady of the Snows near the palace. Christopher's brother-in-law Janusz Kiszka (1586-1654), voivode of Polotsk, also had his manor nearby. It is very significant that the palace of the Duke of Birzai (Domus Jllmi Principis Radzivilli in Birze ducis) is mentioned as the first (and not the Palace of the Grand Dukes) in the legend of the view of Vilnius by Tomasz Makowski (Tomašas Makovskis), created around 1600, as well as the location of the Calvinist school (after "Książęcy splendor w stolicy ..." by Tadeusz Bernatowicz, p. 22). The Radziwills purchased many luxury items from around the world in the country's main port, Gdańsk, in Polish Prussia. "The register of things sent from Gdańsk to Vilnius by Szczęsny Żydowicz [Szczęsny the Jew]" (Rejestr rzeczy, które się ze Gdańska do Wilna posyłają przez Szczęsnego Żydowicza), June 1620, lists many valuable items acquired by them, including: "Eight paintings painted on panel; Two paintings painted on canvas, among which a portrait of Gabriel Bethlen [Prince of Transylvania] [...] Thirty-four Venetian wine glasses; Two Venetian glasses with covers [...] Five Indian walnut trees; Spanish ebony and ivory round table with checkers [...] French red wines, one barrel; French white wines, one barrel" (Obrazow na drzewie malowanych osm; Obrazow na plotnie malowanych dwa, Miedzy ktoremi conterfet Bethlem Gabore [...] Kieliszkow weneckich sztuk trzydziesci y cztery; Szklenic weneckich z nakrywkami dwie [...] Drzewa Indyiskie orzechowe sztuk pięc; Stoł okrągły Hebanowy y zwarcabami kością sadzony Hiszpansky [...] Wina Francuskie czyrwone beczka iedna; Wina Francuskie białe beczka iedna) (Central Archives of Historical Records in Warsaw, AGAD 1/354/0/26/22). The paintings were probably made in the Netherlands, Flanders or Venice. Old inventories also confirm that their numerous residences were filled with many paintings, unfortunately the descriptions are very general and the names of the painters are not mentioned. In the "Vilnius brick manor" alone, approximately 125 paintings were recorded in the years 1621-1628. It is known, however, that in one of the rooms in Birzai there was a painting on the ceiling depicting the meeting of Prince Christopher with Gustavus Adolphus. The earlier victory of Christopher Radziwill and Jan Karol Chodkiewicz over the Swedes in 1601 was illustrated by a large painting of the Battle of Kokenhausen, listed among other paintings (portraits, hunts, "kitchens") in the manor house in Koydanava (now Dzyarzhynsk in Belarus) in 1627. Many paintings and portraits are mentioned in the register made before 1636 (AGAD 1/354/0/26/50), like in a brick mansion in Vilnius - "In a wooden dining room paintings on the walls ... 19, Opposite in the room pictures ... 2" (W Drzewnianej stołowej izbie nascianach obrazow ... 19, NAprzeciwko wpokoiu obrazow ... 2) or paintings taken from the Vilnius manor of Janusz Radziwill (1579-1620) - "from alcove two large paintings; from large house from rooms two large paintings; different portraits, including the father of Her Ladyship Margrave John George [Elector of Brandenburg] and King of England" (Z Alkowy obrazow dwa wielkich; Z wielkiej kamienice spokoiow obrazow wielkich dwa, Conterfetow Roznych, Toiest Conterfet ojca Xiezny jej mosci Margrafa Jana Jerzego i krola Angielskiego 3), as well as miniatures from the Radziwill house in Toruń - portrait of late Prince Henry of England (Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales) in diamond frame, portrait of English Princess in diamond frame, two-sided portrait of Elector of Saxony and his wife in diamond frame, portrait of Elector of Brandenburg and his wife in diamond frame, portrait of English Princess, portrait of King and Queen of France, portrait of Princess Radziwill (Anna Kiszczanka?), voivodess of Vilnius and portrait of King of England. Receipts for jewels in this register are signed by Daniel von der Rennen, most likely a Dutch merchant active in Gdańsk (possibly a relative of Gdańsk goldsmith Peter van der Rennen). Inventory of Nesvizh Castle in 1636 (AGAD 1/354/0/26/52), lists the portrait of hetman Jan Karol Chodkiewicz (d. 1621), voivode of Vilnius (Konterfert Pana Wileńskiego Chodkiewicza), full-length portrait of King Sigismund III Vasa (Konterfet Zupełny Zygmunta Króla Je M polskiego) and other portraits (Konterfetów Roznych). "I hope that Y.P.M. [Your Princely Mightiness] will send to my father's Kunstkamer [art cabinet] a special treat" wrote Janusz to his cousin Boguslaus Radziwill, sending him "silver art", possibly Scythian, found in Volhynia (and received from Prince Vyshnevetsky) for evaluation by foreign antique dealers. In another letter Janusz thanks him for a portrait sent from France. During his educational journeys, Prince Janusz informed his father about military works and other the new releases on the bookselling market. In his correspondence, he informed Christopher II of the intention to print in Antwerp the work Icones et elogia illustrorum virorum, which was to include biographies of Polish magnates. He asked for portraits of his grandfather, uncle and father to be sent to him, because he only had the image of the "Orphan" (Nicolaus Christopher Radziwill) with him. He added that "the costs should not be weighed" in this regard. Prince Christopher also asked the tutors to ensure that portraits of Janusz were made during his son's trips abroad - "in whatever costume suits him better, send it to me" (w habicie, który mu będzie naprzystojniejszy, przysyłać mi), while Janusz thanked his cousin for his portrait "because from this effigy I took the model of the current French costume" (bom z niego modeliusz wziął teraźniejszego stroju francuskiego) (after "Książka i literatura ..." by Mariola Jarczykowa, p. 24-28, 32, 34-36, 47). During his stay in the Netherlands, Boguslaus established relations with Lucas Vorsterman, an Antwerp engraver from the circle of Rubens and van Dyck, who accompanied Radziwill during the war of 1640/41 and then painted his portrait. In Antwerp, Boguslaus came into contact with a painter and art dealer - Matthijs Musson, a student of Rubens. It is confirmed that in 1646 Musson delivered many works of art to the prince in Amsterdam, including two paintings for 63 guilders and a copy of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary by Rubens for 80 guilders. In 1645-1647, van den Wouwer, Musson's cousin, the owner of the "gallery of antiques", delivered to the prince 6 paintings with hunts for 56 guilders each (after "Galerie obrazów i "Gabinety Sztuki" Radziwiłłów w XVII w." by Teresa Sulerzyska, p. 88-89, 91). The inventory of paintings in the collection of Princess Louise Charlotte Radziwill (1667-1695), Christopher's great-granddaughter, drawn up in 1671, lists 5 paintings which could be effigies of the hetman at different ages (29/9, 35/5, 38/8, 85/4, 86/5) and a drawing with "Prince Christopher's funeral" (876/6) (after "Inwentarz galerii obrazów Radziwiłłów z XVII w." by Teresa Sulerzyska). The inventory also includes a painting of "Nymphs asleep while hunting" (350/3), while a drawing representing sleeping women, being a study for "The rest of Diana and her nymphs" by Peter Paul Rubens (figures) and Jan Brueghel the Elder (landscape and animals), is visible in the still life attributed to Abraham Susenier (Agnes Etherington Art Centre). The person who commissioned the still life owned the study drawing for Rembrandt's portraits, so this patron may also have owned the original painting by Rubens and Brueghel. The composition of "The rest of Diana and her nymphs" is known from multiple versions and copies, such as the copy from the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna (GG 1707) or another version from the Alte Pinakothek in Munich (344). The version kept at the Museum of Hunting and Nature in Paris (oil on panel, 61 x 98 cm, 68-3-2) is considered the original. This painting includes a pendant (companion piece) representing "Diana and her nymphs leaving for the hunt" (oil on panel, 57 x 98 cm, 68-3-1). Although the two paintings appear to form a pair, their provenance is determined differently - the first (sleeping nymphs) is considered to come from the collection of Frederick II of Prussia, whose dubious accomplishment was the First Partition of Poland, in his Sanssouci Palace near Berlin, while the second painting is said to have remained for some time in Rubens' personal collection and was acquired by Matthijs Musson after the painter's death. Both paintings are dated around 1623-1624, therefore from the time when Prince Ladislaus Sigismund Vasa visited Rubens' studio. The 1633 inventory of Radziwill Castle in Lubcha in Belarus (Central Archives of Historical Records in Warsaw, 1/354/0/26/45) lists "A large painting with Diana and her maidens, the fauns laugh at, given by the present king", that is Ladislaus IV (item 37) and "A painting in ebony frames depicting Diana with nymphs washing by the spring" (38). In 1560, Krzysztof Krupski, starost of Horodło, ordered a large throne tapestry with the coat of arms of King Sigismund Augustus in the workshop of Anton Leyniers in Brussels (Wawel Royal Castle), so it could also be the other way around that the king commissioned in Flanders a work of art glorifying the most powerful family of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, whose ambitions were sometimes truly royal. We cannot exclude that copies or originals of the two paintings in Paris were in Lubcha, especially since the main motif of both compositions is a black horn, exactly like in the coat of arms of the Radziwill family - Trąby, as depicted in Wojciech Cieciszewski's "Kryształ Z Popiołv", published in Vilnius in 1643, dedicated to Christopher's son Janusz. Around 1652, Flemish engravers Pierre Rucholle and Pieter de Jode II created an engraved portrait of Prince Christopher Radziwill, probably based on a painting or drawing by the Dutch painter Michiel Jansz. van Mierevelt. The paintings belonging to the Hetman were sometimes described in the poems of his court poets, as in certain works of Daniel Naborowski (1573-1640), including the most famous erotic poem "On the Eyes of the English Princess" (Na oczy królewny angielskiej), which would correspond to portraits of the English princess mentioned in the inventories. This poet's epigrams "On nude images in the bathhouse" (Na nagie obrazy w łaźni) could have been a verbal commentary on the paintings decorating the bathhouses in the Vilnius residence, also mentioned in the inventories. In one of the occasional poems, Naborowski mentioned about the prince's gallery: "My Lord, you have beautifully painted Bacchuses" (Panie mój, masz Bachusów malowanych siła) and in others he refers to the portraits of Bishop Eustachy Wollowicz and Prince Ladislaus Sigismund Vasa in national costume holding a buzdygan mace. Christopher also had a large cabinet of curiosities. In addition to paintings, the Hetman also received various curiosities for his collection and sculptures such as "Adam and Eve in wood, delicately carved, where all the limbs move", offered by Ladislaus IV. He also collected rare numismats, as evidenced by a document in which Christopher asked Mr. Kłosowski to purchase a library and rare coins from the Gorajski family, including "some old Roman and Greek coins" (jakieś numizmata staroświeckie rzymskie i greckie). His scientific interests were also manifested by maintaining contacts through letters with former tutors in Leipzig, Heidelberg and Basel, as well as by recruiting "people learned in foreign countries" to his court. Radziwill also supported the settlement of Protestants in his domains, welcoming refugees from German countries ravaged by the Thirty Years' War. The immigration was so great that according to Janusz Tazbir the Commonwealth became a real refugium Germaniae (after "Korespondencja i literatura okolicznościowa ..." by Mariola Jarczykowa, p. 81, 117). In a letter dated June 2, 1629 from Kedainiai, local starost Piotr Kochlewski reported to Christopher that "more and more Germans are coming from Prussia every day" (Z Prus co dzień Niemców przybywa). In his palace there was also a temporary or permanent theater - "The next day, Friday, after lunch, there was a comedy, in the presence of envoys from Moscow and Florence", as Janusz Radziwill informed his father in a letter. Christopher was considered a good orator - "The voivode also delivered an elegant speech to the Archduchess, who responded in Italian", recalled Albert Stanislaus Radziwill (1593-1656) about welcoming of Cecilia Renata of Austria in 1637. The mentioned inventory of Lubcha Castle also lists many other valuable items from the prince's collection. Among them, we can distinguish Venetian glass (Szklanic weneckich), luxury items purchased from the French (Rzeczy Nowe Rozne od Francuzów Kupione), including a pillow embroidered with gold and silver, a silk cherry comb case (Grzebieniarz) embroidered with gold and silver and five pairs of silk stockings embroidered with gold and silver, "Dutch tablecloths and various canvases" (Obrusy Olenderskie y Płotna Rożne), images and portraits, mainly embroidered on satin, made of cut paper as well as painted portraits of Gustavus Adolphus, King of Sweden (called Duke of Sodermanland), Gabriel Bethlen, Prince of Transylvania, Eustachy Wollowicz, Bishop of Vilnius, painted on white satin, portraits of the Prince Radziwill and his wife Anna Kiszczanka, painted on copper, prints, maps and wax sculptures, silver plaque with image of Emperor Ferdinand II, three paintings of large dogs and a large painting of a bear, Persian and oriental rugs and carpets - 142 in total (16, 38, 17, 10, 8, 22, 30, 1), 11 Dutch green silk tapestries with figures, 9 green Dutch tapestries with figures without silk, "a Dutch tapestry on the table with different coats of arms of the princes, Their Highnesses" (opona Olenderska na stol z Herbami Roznemi Xiąząt Ich mosci), 18 white tapestries made locally and Turkish tents. Evangelical Bible in Polish - Biblia swięta, published in Gdańsk in 1632, sponsored and dedicated to Prince Christopher, is one of Radziwill's most important achievements. The title page by Cornelis Claesz. Duysend was most likely created in Amsterdam (National Library of Poland, SD XVII.3.4795). As a leader of Lithuanian Calvinists, Christopher founded churches and schools, but also supported and imposed policies favorable to his co-believers. With the growing influence of the Jesuits and Habsburgs at the royal court, times became increasingly difficult for non-Catholics in a multi-religious nation. King Sigismund III's second wife Constance of Austria, whose relatives in Spain participated in the public auto-da-fé (Constance's nephew, Philip IV of Spain, requested that an auto-da-fé take place at court in 1632 to celebrate the healing of his wife, Elizabeth of France) and whose brother-in-law King Philip III of Spain expelled the Moriscos in 1609, was famous for her intolerance. Many nobles and dignitaries began to follow the queen's example. Poles often succumbed to Western fashions, but the fashion for religious fanaticism could only bring bad results. Fashion in the 17th century was frequently used for political reasons, as evidenced by the portraits of King Ladislaus IV in French, Spanish and national costumes, but also to demonstrate connections or beliefs, or simply to show splendor and wealth. For example, the Sapieha/Sapega portrait series at Wawel Royal Castle presents a wide variety of not only Lithuanian but also European (including Spanish and Dutch) fashion from the 17th century. The diversity in this matter was truly remarkable - George Radziwill (1578-1613), castellan of Trakai, a fervent Calvinist educated in Leipzig, Strasbourg and Basel, left horses and clothes in his will to his brothers-in-law: Italian - to Dorohostajski and hussar - to Gorajski. Since Catholics in the royal-ducal court in Vilnius and Warsaw sometimes manifested their beliefs through Spanish, Italian of Flemish fashion, the leader of the Calvinists undoubtedly also wore Protestant costumes. The portrait of a man against a landscape by Govert Flinck, a pupil of Rembrandt usually living in the house of Hendrick Uylenburgh, artistic agent of Sigismund III Vasa, in Amsterdam, now kept in the National Museum in Warsaw, is dated around 1640 (oil on panel, 92 x 69 cm, M.Ob.2584 MNW). The painting comes from the collection of Karol Radziwill in Argentina and was purchased in 2005. It is identified with a painting belonging to King Stanislaus Augustus Poniatowski in Warsaw and mentioned in the "Catalogue of paintings belonging to His Majesty the King of Poland" (Catalogue des tableaux Appartenant à Sa Majesté le Roi de Pologne) in 1795 as "Old man standing, holding a stick, dressed in Dutch style, with a small white beard, the background is a landscape, on wood" (Viellard debout, tenant un bâton, vêtu a la hollandoise, avec une petite barbe blanche, le fond est un paysage, sur bois, item 162). The name of the painter is not mentioned, so it is possible that the king owned a copy or another painting or that the Radziwills reacquired the portrait of their ancestor from the royal collection. The painting was sold in Paris in 1933 (Hôtel Drouot, March 8, 1933, lot 11, FLINCK (attribué à GOVAERT) / 11. Portrait d'un seigneur hollandais. / Debout dans la campagne, appuyé sur une canne, il est vêtu de noir. Bois. Haut., 92 cent.; larg., 70 cent.), together with portrait of Princess Christine Magdalene Radziwill (1776-1796) in a wooded landscape, painted in Vienna in 1795 by Giuseppe Maria Grassi, although at that time the princess was in Nieborów and later in Saint Petersburg (so most likely made from study drawings sent to Vienna). Both paintings were part of the Radziwill collection at Château d'Ermenonville and according to Tadeusz Mańkowski (1878-1956), Flinck's painting depicted Radziwill "the Orphan" (?) (after "Rembrandt w Polsce" by Michał Walicki, p. 331). The man presented as a wanderer with a cane manifests "the choice of an active attitude in the journey through life, consistent with the ideals of Calvinism" (according to Museum's description). The church in the background closely resembles the Church of St. George in Vilnius, near the palace of the Duke of Birzai, depicted in Makowski's print, as if the man were standing in the garden of this residence. It also resembles the church in Duysend's engraving Biblia swięta, published in 1632. The sitter in turn resembles the man in the portraits with two feathers by Rembrandt and his circle, notably the version from Viderup Castle. A similar "wanderer with a cane" was also depicted in the Vanitas still life, attributed to Susenier, comprising the study for the portrait by Rembrandt with two feathers. The Lubcha inventory also mentions several of Christopher's garments which could be depicted in the painting, like 19 different kurta (a jacket or a short kaftan), including one "black leather stitched kurta with black and silver buttons" and another "black stitched leather kurta with white silk buttons" (Kurta Czarna skurzana Przeszywana z guzikami Czarnemi srebrem Przetykanemi [...] Kurta skurzana Czarna Przeszywana z guzikami białemi Jedwabnemi), 4 hats, 3 made from felted beaver fur, including one black with black feather (Kapelusz Czarny Bobrowy z Piorem Czarnym) and 8 canes, apart from 1, all made in India, including first set with silver (Laska Czarna Indyska srebrem oprawna z sikawką). Christopher died on November 19, 1640 at the age of 55, according to his contemporaries, devastated by the turn of events after the attack on the Calvinist church in Vilnius, when the king not only did not punish the culprits of the attack, but also ordered the church to be moved outside the city walls and prohibited pastors from carrying out pastoral activities in the city.
Portrait of Prince Christopher Radziwill (1585-1640), Grand Hetman of Lithuania, holding a cane by Govert Flinck, ca. 1640, National Museum in Warsaw.
The rest of Diana and her nymphs by Peter Paul Rubens and Jan Brueghel the Elder, ca. 1623-1624, Museum of Hunting and Nature in Paris.
Diana and her nymphs leaving for the hunt by Peter Paul Rubens and Jan Brueghel the Elder, ca. 1623-1624, Museum of Hunting and Nature in Paris.
Portrait of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria holding a tulip by workshop of Frans Luycx
On October 7, 1649, in Navalcarnero, near Madrid, 14-year-old Archduchess Maria Anna of Austria (1634-1696) married her 44-year-old uncle, King Philip IV of Spain. The couple spends their wedding night in the royal monastery of El Escorial. The archduchess was a niece of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria (1611-1644) and she was also related to her husband, King Ladislaus IV Vasa (1595-1648).
Maria Anna (or Mariana in Spanish) was the daughter of Emperor Ferdinand III and the Infanta Maria Anna of Spain (daughter of King Philip III of Spain and niece of two wives of Sigismund III Vasa). Since she was a child she was engaged to her cousin Balthasar Charles, Prince of Asturias, but when he unexpectedly died in 1646, King Philip IV, who had been widowed after the death of his first wife, Elisabeth of France, decided to marry the young archduchess. The political situation forced the king to remarry for the sake of securing a male heir for the great Spanish empire, as he had only one legitimate daughter - Infanta Maria Theresa of Spain, future queen of France. Before the wedding, many portraits of the bride arrived in Spain, mainly created by leading imperial court portraitist Frans Luycx. Let us cite in particular the portrait at the age of approximately 5 years, thus produced around 1639 (Prado, P002871) and the portrait in mourning after the death of her mother from about 1646 (P006194). Around 1646 another portrait of Maria Anna, with tulips in a vase, attributed to Frans Luycx, was sent to Spain (P002441). In this portrait, she appears to be more than 11 years old, which has not gone unnoticed in Spain. After death of archduchess' mother it became necessary to once again strengthen the family and political ties between the two branches of the house of Habsburgs, while the fertility and good health of the candidate were the most important in Spain. It is perhaps to this portrait that the report which evaluated the archduchess as a candidate refers: "A portrait of her has only come that represents her at the age of 11 years and two months [...] very grown up, but with her true age her painted effigy is discredited, was it painted faithfully?" (Un retrato solo ha venido que la representa con edad de 11 años y dos meses [...] muy crecida pero con su edad verdadera se desacredita su altura pintada, mas si es pintar como ver?) (after "Entre Viena y Madrid ..." by Gemma Cobo Delgado, p. 155-158). It is now difficult to determine whether it was manipulated in order to convince the Spanish royal court of her good health. It also gives some idea of the important political role that painted effigies sometimes played and that they were not always accurate, intentionally or not. Although the painting is attributed to Luycx, it differs from other works by this painter, notably the two other mentioned portraits of the archduchess in Prado. It is very possible that it was entirely produced by the painter's workshop or even another painter close to him, which could also partly explain this lack of faithfulness of the portrait. Luycx was a very busy painter. In addition to working for the Habsburgs, the nobility of Bohemia, Austria and Germany, he also produced numerous paintings for the Polish-Lithuanian court. In the Alte Pinakothek in Munich several paintings by Frans coming from Neuburg Castle have been preserved. The castle was the residence of Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa, sister of Ladislaus IV Vasa who, on June 9, 1642 in Warsaw, married Philip William of Neuburg. She brought a sizeable trousseau into the marriage: 243,333 thalers in cash, jewelry worth around 300,000 thalers, valuable objects in gold, silver, furniture, tapestries and Persian carpets. It is quite possible that the paintings come from her dowry since they depict the princess's brother - Ladislaus IV (oil on canvas, 250 x 160 cm, 4197) and brothers of her sister-in-law Queen Cecilia Renata - Emperor Ferdinand III (1608-1657) (oil on canvas, 206 x 137 cm, 6779) and Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria (1614-1662) as clergyman (oil on canvas, 208 x 119 cm, 6819). The paintings probably come from a series commissioned from the Luycx workshop, however the portrait of Cecilia Renata is missing. In the Alte Pinakothek there is a painting of the Unknown Princess (Unbekannte Fürstin) which also comes from Neuburg Castle (oil on canvas, 209 x 104 cm, 6781/7244). Already in 1969, Janina Ruszczyc identified this painting as the effigy of the Queen of Poland and the Grand Duchess of Lithuania ("Portrety Zygmunta III i jego rodziny", p. 212-213, pic. 39). Her facial features and costume closely resemble those in Cecilia Renata's portrait in the Nationalmuseum in Stockholm (NMGrh 299). The queen holds a tulip, symbol of love and the vanity of earthly things (after "Nature and Its Symbols" by Lucia Impelluso, p. 82). She wears a brooch with a Polish eagle, similar to the one in the Louvre (MR 418). The style of this portrait is very similar to that of Archduchess Maria Anna with tulips in Prado (P002441). Another portrait of a member of the royal-grand ducal family of Poland-Lithuania, painted in a similar style, is also in the Alte Pinakothek (oil on canvas, 227.8 x 142 cm, 6961). This full-length image depicts Prince Charles Ferdinand Vasa (1613-1655), half-brother of King Ladislaus IV, bishop of Wrocław from 1625 and bishop of Płock from 1640. This painting also comes from Neuburg Castle. The portrait of the prince-bishop as a prelate, close to the style of Frans Luycx, is in the Archdiocesan Museum in Wrocław (oil on canvas, 98 x 78 cm, 1377).
Portrait of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria (1611-1644) holding a tulip by workshop of Frans Luycx, ca. 1640, Alte Pinakothek in Munich.
Portrait of Prince Charles Ferdinand Vasa (1613-1655), bishop of Wrocław and Płock by workshop of Frans Luycx, ca. 1640, Alte Pinakothek in Munich.
Portrait of Prince Charles Ferdinand Vasa (1613-1655), bishop of Wrocław and Płock by workshop of Frans Luycx, 1640s, Archdiocesan Museum in Wrocław.
Portraits of Hendrick van Uylenburgh and his daughter Sara by Rembrandt and workshop
"Portrait of a Portuguese Rabbi, painted by Rembrandt, in black frame" (Portret Rabina Portugalskiego, malowania Rynbranta, w ramach czarnych, No.74.), valued at 150 thalers and "A picture of similar dimensions, a Jewish woman in a beret, by Rembrandt painter, in black frame" (Obraz takieyze wielkosci, Zydowki w Birlecie, Rynbranta Malarza, wramach czarnych, No.75.), valued at 190 thalers, in the King's Bedroom of the Wilanów Palace in 1696 is probably the oldest preserved description of paintings by Rembrandt, today in the collection of the Royal Castle in Warsaw and known as The Scholar at his Writing Table and The Girl in a Picture Frame.
General Inventory of the Wilanów Palace from November 10th, 1696 also lists other works by Rembrandt, like "A large painting of an old man by Rembrandt in gilded frame and rounded top" (Obraz Rynbranta Malarza, Na ktorym Starzec wymalowany, wielki, wramach złocistych, u wierzchu okrągły, No. 210.), valued at 80 thalers, in the Upper Treasury with paintings from the Lower Gallery and Library, "A painting with Three Kings by Rembrandt in black frame" (Obraz Trzech Krolow, Rynbranta malarza, w ramach czarnych, No. 92.), valued at 100 thalers (possibly Adoration of the Magi from 1632, today in The State Hermitage Museum) and "A painting with Abraham and Hagar by Rembrandt in black frame" (Obraz Abrahama Z Agar Rynbranta malarza w ramach czarnych, No. 93.), valued at 100 thalers (possibly Abraham dismissing Hagar and Ishmael from about 1640, today in Victoria and Albert Museum), in the King's Dutch Study. The inventory lists many other Dutch paintings, including most probably The Loveletter by Johannes Vermeer: "A painting of a lady in gold dress playing lute, a girl giving her a letter, in black frame" (Obraz Damy graiącey na Lutni, w złotey Szacie, a dziewczyna list iey oddaie w ramach czarnych, No. 156.), valued at 35 thalers, and a copy (?) of The Milkmaid also by Vermeer: "A painting with a Dutch dwelling with a female cook pouring milk, in gilded copper frame" (Obrazek na ktorym Domostwo Holenderskie, a kucharka mleko zlewa, wramach miedzią złoconych, No. 180.), valued at 20 thalers, in the Upper Treasury. Paintings of "Portuguese Rabbi" and "a Jewish woman" were always together since. In 1720 Konstanty Sobieski, son of king John III Sobieski, sold the palace to Elżbieta Sieniawska, and after her death in 1729, her daughter, Maria Zofia, offered a lifetime lease on the palace to the successor of John III, King Augustus II the Strong (1670-1733), Elector of Saxony. Maria Zofia or her daughter Izabela Lubomirska, most probably sold the paintings, but ordered a copy of "a Jewish woman", which is still in the Wilanów Palace (Wil.1656). Before 1769 the paintings were transported to Berlin and were acquired by Friedrich Paul von Kameke (1711-1769), who was married to Marie Golovkin (1718-1757), a daughter of the Russian ambassador to Prussia. Georg Friedrich Schmidt created prints after the paintings entitled in French: "The bride's father paying her dowry" (Le Pere de la fiancée reglant sa dot) and "The Jewish Bride" (La Juive Fiancée). Under those titles the works returned to Poland acquired by king Stanislaus Augustus Poniatowski in 1777 and inventory numbers of his collection 207 and 208 were painted in the upper left corners of both paintings, still visible today. Sold again after king's death, they were transported to Vienna and in 1994 Karolina Lanckorońska offered them to the Polish people. Workshop copy of "The Jewish Bride" appears in the inventory of Danish royal Art Cabinet (Kunstkammer) of 1737, today in the National Gallery of Denmark (inventory number KMSsp406). Despite not having a similar composition the paintings should be considered as pendants (usually paintings of married couples or relatives), as according to tradition they depict a father and his daughter. They also have similar dimesions (105.7 x 76.4 cm / 105.5 x 76 cm), both are painted on oak wood panels, they have similar baroque black frames, most probably original or re-created after original, exaclty as in the inventory description of the Wilanów Palace. They were finally painted the same year and signed by the author (Rembrandt f. 1641 on both). At the end of 1631, Rembrandt moved from Leiden to Amsterdam. He initially stayed with an art dealer, Hendrick van Uylenburgh, who from 1628 may have been an intermediary for the sale of Rembrandt's works on the Amsterdam market. From 1631 to 1635, Rembrandt became chief painter of Uylenburgh's studio and produced a considerable number of portraits for wealthy and important Amsterdammers, such as the importer of fur Nicolaes Ruts. In 1634, he married Hendrick's relative, Saskia. Uylenburgh, born in about 1587, came from a Mennonite family, originally from Friesland, who emigrated to Poland and settled in Kraków, where Hendrick's father worked as a royal cabinet maker. His brother Rombout became a court painter. Hendrick was also trained as a painter, however he was primarly active as an art agent to King Sigismund III Vasa. He probably never practiced the profession of painter, at least no works have survived. Around 1612 he moved to Gdańsk. Hendrick arranged large art transports to Poland on behalf of the king, including paintings from the Netherlands and luxury goods, before starting his art dealership and studio in Amsterdam in about 1625. In December 1637 Hendrick commissioned Rembrandt to portray the Polish diplomat Andrzej Rej, who was on a secret mission to the English court for King Ladislaus IV and, while passing through Amsterdam. Van Uylenburgh received 50 guilders as a commission (after "Saskia, de vrouw van Rembrandt" by Ben Broos, p. 80). Around 1624 Hendrick married Maria van Eyck (d. 1638). The couple had three sons, including Gerrit (born in about 1625), who took over his father's business, and at least four daughters, Sara, Anna, Susanna and Lyntgen, at least one of whom was a well-known draftswoman. Sara Hendricksdr (d. 1696) must have been the oldest as she is mentioned first in the testament of her parents from 1634 and a deed of February 3, 1668 regarding inheritance of her brother Abraham. She was born in about 1626 or 1627, hence she was 14/15 years old in 1641. Her biblical name of the wife of Abraham, match perfectly the old title of the Warsaw painting "a Jewish woman" or "The Jewish Bride". The young girl surrounded by artists, was probably also introduced to painting by her father. Possibly playing in her father's studio she might have come up with an idea to be depicted in a picture frame, in the trompe l'oeil (trick the eye) style. Her father Hendrick who was about 54 years old in 1641 was therefore depicted as a scholar at his writing table, very similar to the etching by Rembrandt representing Cornelis Claesz Anslo, Mennonite Preacher from Amsterdam, created in 1641 (The Metropolitan Museum of Art), in the same year as the Warsaw paintings, or effigy of Menno Simons (1496-1561), preacher and theologian, whose followers formed the Mennonite church, by Jacob Burghart, published in 1683 (Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen). "Uylenburgh came from a family of Mennonites (a conservative branch of the Anabaptists), who emphasized study and personal interpretation of scripture and individual responsibility for one's own salvation" (after "Rembrandt/not Rembrandt in the Metropolitan Museum of Art" by Hubertus von Sonnenburg, p. 15). This explain why he was represented as a scholar. A significant Mennonite community was established in the mid-16th century in the Vistula river delta in Poland and near Warsaw, by 1624, in previously uninhabited areas, giving rise to the so-called Olęder colonization. On December 22, 1642 King Ladislaus IV issued the first privilege for Mennonites. It is highly possible that already in 1641 the king received a portrait of his artistic agent and his daughter, who could also find a suitable husband among Polish Mennonites. The same old man in rich costume was also depicted in a series of paintings by Rembrandt and his workshop, sitting and holding a stick. One dated '1645' from the collection of Pierre Crozat in Paris is in Lisbon (Calouste Gulbenkian Museum), other, which was in the ducal collection in Munich is today in Amsterdam (Museum het Rembrandthuis) and another in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. A version from the Princely Collections of Liechtenstein is attributed to Salomon Koninck (1609-1656), a member of van Uylenburgh's academy. It is possible that Stanisław Koniecpolski (1591-1646), Grand Hetman of the Crown, ordered or received the copies of the portraits from the royal collection, because two of such paintings are visible in a photograph by Edward Trzemeski taken around 1880 and showing the Yellow Room of his Pidhirtsi palace near Lviv in Ukraine. They were hung opposite the portrait of Jakub Ludwik Sobieski (1667-1737), son of John III, painted in Paris in 1699 by François de Troy (Wawel Castle, 10385, inscribed on the back: Peint à Paris par François de Troy en 1699). It is therefore also possible that the copies were made for Sobieski, who, interestingly, was most likely in Oława in Silesia in 1699, where his son Jan was born and not in Paris, so his portrait was perhaps made from study drawings. An old copy of Sara's portrait, perhaps made by a Venetian painter, is in the Museo Correr in Venice (Cl. I n. 0910).
Portrait of Sara van Uylenburgh (1626/27-1696) in a picture frame by Rembrandt, 1641, Royal Castle in Warsaw.
Portrait of Sara van Uylenburgh (1626/27-1696) in a picture frame by workshop of Rembrandt, ca. 1641, National Gallery of Denmark.
Portrait of Sara van Uylenburgh (1626/27-1696) by unknown painter after Rembrandt, mid-18th century, Wilanów Palace in Warsaw.
Portrait of Hendrick van Uylenburgh (ca. 1587-1661) at his writing table by Rembrandt, 1641, Royal Castle in Warsaw.
Portrait of Hendrick van Uylenburgh (ca. 1587-1661) with a stick by Rembrandt, 1645, Calouste Gulbenkian Museum.
Portrait of Hendrick van Uylenburgh (ca. 1587-1661) with a stick by workshop of Rembrandt, ca. 1645, Museum het Rembrandthuis.
Portrait of Hendrick van Uylenburgh (ca. 1587-1661) with a stick by workshop of Rembrandt, ca. 1645, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Portrait of Hendrick van Uylenburgh (ca. 1587-1661) with a stick by Salomon Koninck, ca. 1645, Liechtenstein Museum in Vienna.
Portraits of Hieronim Radziejowski and his two wives by Ferdinand Bol, Rembrandt and followers
"Named Radziejowski, you will stay in the council, evil betrayals are your homeland counsels" (Radziejowskim nazwany zostajesz od rady, A Twe w ojczyźnie rady są złośliwe zdrady), portrayed Vice-Chancellor of the Crown Hieronim Radziejowski (1612-1667) in 1651 anonymous satirical poem.
In October 1632, thanks to his father's support, Stanisław Radziejowski (1575-1637), courtier of Queen Anna Jagiellon, Hieronim became a courtier of the newly elected King Ladislaus IV Vasa. He quickly gained significant influence, in 1634 became the starost of Sochaczew and in 1637 starost of Łomża and Carver of Queen's court. Around 1637, he married a wealthy widow Katarzyna Woyna née Męcińska (ca. 1608-1641), wife of Piotr Woyna (d. 1633), Steward of Lithuania and after her death, in June 1642, thanks to the support of the king, he married another wealthy widow Eufrozyna Eulalia Wiśniowiecka née Tarnowska (d. 1645). Eufrozyna was a heiress of a considerable fortune of her first husband Prince Jerzy Wiśniowiecki (Yuriy Vyshnevetsky), starost of Kamianka, and the legal custody of her and her property belonged to Prince Jeremi Wiśniowiecki (Yarema Vyshnevetsky), son of Raina Movila (ca. 1589-1619). By decision of the king Hieronim became her main heir. In May 1650 Radziejowski was married a third time to the richest widow in the country Elżbieta Kazanowska née Słuszczanka (1619-1671), whose husband died just four months earlier. Personal scandal always accompanied Radziejowski's political career. In 1640 he was elected a deputy to the Sejm, although there were demands for his removal from the chamber. At the first session of parliament, he was publicly accused by a nobleman of kidnapping his daughter from one of the monasteries in Warsaw and raping her (after "Hieronim Radziejowski: studium władzy i opozycji" by Adam Kersten, p. 60). Two years later, he married his second wife Eufrozyna in an atmosphere of scandal as the young widow had already agreed to another relationship, she was to marry Stanisław Denhoff. He allegedly paid a large bribe of 25,000 ducats to the royal couple, John II Casimir and Marie Louise Gonzaga, for receiving the office of Vice-Chancellor in 1650 and a year later, during a campaign against the Cossacks, when the king ordered his correspondence to be opened, a letter was found to the queen criticizing John Casimir and complaining that the king had a love affair with Radziejowski's wife, who accompanied him on the campaign. Hieronim's wife, who left the camp after the correspondence was revealed, filed for divorce. In 1652, on charges of insulting the royal name, he was sentenced to death, but fled to Vienna and then to Sweden. In 1655 he accompanied the Swedish forces invading the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Before the Second World War in the Dressing Room of the Royal Palace on the Isle in Warsaw there were two small paintings attributed to Rembrandt's pupil Ferdinand Bol or an 18th century imitator of Rembrandt Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich. Catalogues of the royal gallery described them as "A man in a half-figure with a mustache, dressed in brown, wearing a black headdress (Homme à mi corps avec des moustaches vêtu de brun et coëffé de noir, number 43) and "A woman in a half-figure in a brown dress, with a chain of precious stones and pearls in her hair, ears and on her head" (Femme à mi corps vetu de brun avec une chaîne enrichie des pierreries ayant des perles au col et aux oreilles, ainsi que sur la tête, number 54). The paintings had similar dimensions (30.3 x 25.3 cm / 35.5 x 24 cm) and similar composition, comparable to portrait of Hendrick van Uylenburgh and his daughter Sara by Rembrandt (Royal Castle in Warsaw), both created in 1641. The portrait of a woman from the Palace on the Isle was signed and dated on the right: Bol. f. 1641. This signature was published in a 1931 catalogue of the collection ("Katalog galerji obrazów Pałacu w Łazienkach w Warszawie" by Stanisław Iskierski, p. 53). Other versions of these portraits with slight differences (in man's hat and woman's face), attributed to Rembrandt, were owned in 1763 by count Friedrich Paul von Kameke (1711-1769), a member of Pomeranian noble family, who also owned mentioned portrait of Hendrick van Uylenburgh and his daughter. A German engraver, Georg Friedrich Schmidt, created etchings after these paintings signed in Latin and French (Rembrandt pinx./ G.F. Schmidt fecit aqua forti 1763. Du Cabinet de Monsieur le Comte de Kameke). Several years earlier, in 1735, Schmidt also created another etching after a painting attributed to Rembrandt (signed in Latin: Rembrandt Inv. e. pin: / Schmidt fec: 1735), portrait of a bearded man in eastern costume. His high fur hat and a coat lined with fur are very similar to those visible in a portrait of a man, most probably a Ruthenian Prince, by follower of Aert de Gelder, today in the National Museum in Warsaw (inventory number M.Ob.151 MNW). The latter painting is signed and dated: AV.Gelder.f / 1639 and comes from the collection of Piotr Fiorentini (1791-1858) in Warsaw. Similar costumes are visible in the Surrender of Mikhail Shein at Smolensk in 1634 by Christian Melich (Kórnik Castle) with king Ladislaus IV and his dignitaries and in the portrait of a Polish nobleman by Rembrandt, signed and dated: Rembrandt.f / 1637 (National Gallery of Art in Washington), similar hats are in a portrait of King John II Casimir by Daniel Schultz (Royal Castle in Warsaw), portraits of the members of the Sapieha family from Kodeń (Wawel Royal Castle) and similar fur coats with gold chains are in the self-portrait by Rembrandt or workshop (The Wallace Collection), a portrait of a youth by Pieter de Grebber (Liechtenstein Museum in Vienna) and a portrait of a man in a fur hat and coat by Pieter de Grebber (Private collection). In 1641, Radziejowski and other officials of the Masovian voivodeship become a member of a commission to consider border issues with the Duchy of Prussia. The same year, on October 7, 1641, the sixth and the last Prussian Homage took place in Warsaw. On July 13, the apostolic nuncio informed the Pope that the king had ordered balletti and a musical comedy to be prepared. Venison and fruit were brought from Kraków along the Vistula and excellent French, Italian and Rhine wines from Vienna. The recently finished Ujazdów Castle was prepared to host Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg and his court (after "Ostatni hołd pruski" by Jacek Żukowski). The Elector had the opportunity to admire the great wealth of the Polish-Lithuanian court, a part of which he appropiated during the Deluge few years later (according to Wawrzyniec Jan Rudawski, he "took to Prussia as a spoil, the most valuable paintings and silverware of the royal table"). The cuff of man's attire from the lost painting from the Palace on the Isle is very similar to cuffs from the costumes of Polish nobles, visible, among others, in the Coronation of the Virgin Mary by Herman Han (Oliwa Cathedral in Gdańsk), created between 1624-1627, epitaph of Andrzej Czarnecki (d. 1649), burgrave of Kraków and royal courtier (Saints Peter and Paul Church in Kraków) or costumes of two boys in the Feast of Herod by Bartholomeus Strobel, created in the 1630s (Prado Museum in Madrid). Similar costume with a coat lined with fur, an embroidered shirt and a bejewelled hat is also visible in the Feast of Herod by Strobel, in the painting entitled Prophet Nathan rebukes King David by Strobel's workshop (Private collection) and in the scene of Esther before Ahasuerus from the copper-silver sarcophagus of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria, created before 1648 (Wawel Cathedral), undoubtedly inspired by the costumes at the court of Ladislaus IV. The costume of a woman from a pendant painting also resemble the garments from Strobel's paintings, including the Feast of Herod in the Prado and the attire of two women from Stoning of Saint Stephen, created by Strobel in 1618 for Stanisław Ostroróg (National Museum in Poznań). Her costume is also very similar to those visible in portrait of Jadwiga Rogalińska (National Museum in Poznań), painted in the 1640s, or in the portrait of Helena Opalińska née Zebrzydowska, created in the 1650s (Kalwaria Zebrzydowska Monastery). Some similar elements (chains, coat) are also visible in the etching with effigy of a lady in a fur hat, said to be Princess Owka Praxedis of Vitebsk (Vilnius University Library), created in 1758 after original from mid-17th century. Jadwiga Wypyska née Łuszkowska (ca. 1616- after 1648), mistress of Ladislaus IV, was depicted in similar dress in her portrait by Rembrandt and workshop (Private collection), painted in 1643, identified by me, as well as a lady in a portrait attributed to follower of Rembrandt or possibly Jan Victors (Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, 29.100.103), signed and dated: Rembrandt f / 1643. In all three portraits by Rembrandt and followers the women are holding a fan, a symbol of chastity, carried by betrothed or married women in Venice and Padua. The portrait in the Metropolitan Museum has a pendant depicting a young man with a breastplate and plumed hat (MMA 29.100.102), he bears a striking resemblence to the man from the lost portrait from the Palace on the Isle in Warsaw, to the etching by Georg Friedrich Schmidt, the only preserved signed effigy of Hieronim Radziejowski, created in 1652 by Jeremias Falck Polonus (National Library of Poland) and to the pastel portrait of his son cardinal Michał Stefan Radziejowski by Jan Reisner (National Museum in Warsaw). In 1643 the first son of Radziejowski, Stanisław, was born. It would be a good opportunity to order images of his parents. The blond woman should be therefore identified as Radziejowski's second wife Eufrozyna Eulalia Tarnowska. Consequently the woman from the pendant portrait from the Palace on the Isle is his first wife Katarzyna Męcińska, who died in 1641. Before 1861 both portraits from the Met in New York were in the collection of baron Florentin-Achille Seillière (1813-1873) in Paris, whose daughter Jeanne-Marguerite (1839-1905) married in 1858 Boson de Talleyrand-Périgord (1832-1910), prince of Sagan (now Żagań in Poland) from 1845. The Silesian Duchy of Żagań, was a frequent stop for Kings Augustus II the Strong and Augustus III of Poland, as one of two main routes connecting Warsaw and Dresden ran through the town in the 18th century. It cannot be excluded that one of them offered the paintings to the Dukes of Żagań. Before 1667 Radziejowski purchased a series of tapestries with the story of Jacob, woven in the workshop of Jacob van Zeunen in Brussels in about 1650 (later acquired by Jan Małachowski and offered to the Wawel Cathedral), while his son Michał Stefan, who ordered the works of art in the workshop of Guillaume Jacob in Paris, employed at his court a Dutch-born architect and engineer Tylman Gamerski (who deisgned for him the Chapel of the Seminary in Łowicz and Nieborów Palce).
Portrait of Hieronim Radziejowski (1612-1667), Carver of Queen's court by Ferdinand Bol, ca. 1641, Palace on the Isle in Warsaw, lost.
Portrait of Katarzyna Radziejowska née Męcińska (ca. 1608-1641) holding a fan by Ferdinand Bol, 1641, Palace on the Isle in Warsaw, lost.
Portrait of Hieronim Radziejowski (1612-1667), Carver of Queen's court by Georg Friedrich Schmidt after Rembrandt, 1763 after original from about 1641, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Portrait of Katarzyna Radziejowska née Męcińska (ca. 1608-1641) holding a fan by Georg Friedrich Schmidt after Rembrandt, 1763 after original from about 1641, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Portrait of Hieronim Radziejowski (1612-1667), Carver of Queen's court by follower of Rembrandt, ca. 1643, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Portrait of Eufrozyna Eulalia Radziejowska née Tarnowska (d. 1645) holding a fan by follower of Rembrandt, 1643, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Portrait of a man in eastern costume, most probably a Polish-Lithuanian noble by Georg Friedrich Schmidt after Rembrandt, 1735 after original from the second quarter of the 17th century, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Portrait of a man in eastern costume, most probably a Ruthenian Prince by follower of Aert de Gelder, 1639, National Museum in Warsaw.
Portraits of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria and Kasper Denhoff by Gonzales Coques
In July 1637, the envoys of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, Kasper Denhoff (1588-1645), voivode of Sieradz, Jan Lipski (1589-1641), bishop of Chełmno and John Casimir Vasa (1609-1672), the crown prince, came to Vienna to negotiate concerning the marriage of King Ladislaus IV Vasa to Archduchess Cecilia Renata, daughter of Emperor Ferdinand II.
Denhoff, surrounded by a numerous entourage, entered the capital of Austria with the greatest pomp. The people of the imperial court noticed that the retinue of the voivode of Sieradz and the bishop of Chełmno was richer and more splendid than that of the king's half-brother John Casimir, which they "attributed to the fame of the homeland and to the privilege of freedom". The talks with the emperor must have been difficult and the negotiations were so long that the date of the wedding agreed with the castellan Maksymilian Przerębski was postponed from September 2 to 9. The envoys - among whom Kasper Denhoff was particularly active - demanded, in accordance with the king's request, that the Duchy of Opole and Racibórz be transferred to him in the form of a deposit, which Ladislaus IV had long been trying to obtain for his family. He demanded that not only Cecilia Renata's dowry be secured in this principality, but also the sums that the Habsburgs had long owed to the Vasas (after "Wjazd, koronacja, wesele ..." by Alicja Falniowska-Gradowska, p. 11). Spanish envoys participated in the ongoing negotiations. On July 31, Bishop Lipski blessed the engagement and on August 9, he blessed the marriage per procuram (the husband was represented by Prince John Casimir). The Emperor rewarded both envoys with imperial titles, Denhoff, who was already a count of the Holy Roman Empire, became a prince and Lipski received the title of count for himself and his entire family. Kasper or Kacper Denhoff (Kaspar Dönhoff in German) came from a German noble family that in the 14th century settled in the Livonian lands of the Teutonic Order (Livonian Order). He was a son of Gerhard von Dönhoff, voivode of Dorpat (Tartu in Estonia) and Margarethe von Zweiffel and brother of Ernest Magnus Denhoff (1581-1642), voivode of Parnawa (Pärnu) and Gerard Denhoff (1589/90-1648), voivode of Pomerania. As a courtier of Sigismund III Vasa, after his conversion from Calvinism to Catholicism, Kasper gained considerable influence over the king as his close advisor. In 1627, he received the post of voivode of Dorpat, and in 1634 he was appointed voivode of Sieradz. He also obtained many other offices, which allowed him to build the financial power of the family. On January 11, 1633 in Vienna, together with his brothers Ernest Magnus and Gerard, who remained Calvinists, he was raised by Emperor Ferdinand II to imperial count. In the years 1640-1641 he tried to implement the Polish-Spanish military treaty. He played an important role at the court of Sigismund's successor, Ladislaus IV Vasa. In 1638 he went with Ladislaus to Baden near Vienna and in 1639 to Szczytno for a meeting with the Elector of Brandenburg. In order to gain a permanent presence at court, he eventually applied for the position of Marshal of the Queen's Court. He eventually took this position in 1639 despite resistance from Queen Cecilia Renata, who saw him as a supporter of the king's favorite Adam Kazanowski. From then on, he was almost constantly at court, often participating in Senate meetings. Despite the fact that he remained on good relations with Kazanowski, the opponent of the chancellor Jerzy Ossoliński, in 1645 he married his son Zygmunt to the daughter of the powerful chancellor - Anna Teresa. Shortly afterwards he became seriously ill and died on July 4, 1645. Denhoff was also a well-known patron of the arts. In Kruszyna near Częstochowa, that he received as a dowry of his wife Anna Aleksandra Koniecpolska (d. 1651), the Venetian architect in the royal service Tommaso Poncino built a beautiful palace for the voivode in the years 1630-1632, his main residence. The splendor of the palace can be proven by the fact that it was visited by kings Sigismund III, Ladislaus IV and John Casimir. The marriage of Kasper's daughter Anna to Bogusław Leszczyński (d. 1659), which took place on August 12, 1638 in Kruszyna, in the presence of Ladislaus IV and his wife Cecilia Renata, became one of the most important political and social events of its time. Earlier, between 1625 and 1628, Kasper rebuilt the medieval castle of Bolesławiec in the Renaissance style, which was however destroyed by the Swedes in 1704, during the Great Northern War. In 1636, Denhoff bought Ujazd near Tomaszów Mazowiecki and the castle from the Szczawiński family, which he thoroughly rebuilt. This brought him closer to Warsaw, where he also owned a wooden mansion, built before 1643, probably according to the designs of the royal architect Giovanni Battista Gisleni. This mansion was burned down during the Deluge (1655-1660), and around 1669 a brick mansion was built for Ernest Denhoff (now Potocki Palace). Almost nothing is known of his other patronages, but as an imperial prince, close to the splendid court of Ladislaus IV and his first wife, his artistic collections were undoubtedly exquisite. In 1633 Ill.mi et excell.mi D. D. Georgii Ossolinii ... by Jerzy Ossoliński, Domenico Roncalli and Kasper Denhoff was published in Rome and Marcin Małachowski dedicated his Normae logicae tribvs mentis hvmanae ..., published in Kraków in 1638, to the voivode of Sieradz. Kasper was buried in the chapel of Saint Paul of Thebes (Denhoff Chapel) at the Jasna Góra monastery, which he founded in 1644. In 2002, a miniature portrait of a man, half-length, in a green costume with a fur-lined cape and a fur hat by circle of Gonzales Coques was sold in Amsterdam (oil on copper, 15.9 x 13 cm, Christie's, auction 2546, May 14, 2002, lot 27). Coques, born around 1614 in Antwerp, became an apprentice in the workshop of Pieter Brueghel the Younger, then apprenticed to David Rijckaert II. He is best known for his small portraits and cabinet paintings. Anthony van Dyck's influence earned him the nickname "Little Van Dyck". He probably traveled to England, where van Dyck was active. In 1640-41 he joined the guild of Saint Luke in Antwerp and in 1643 he married Catharina Ryckaert, the daughter of David Rijckaert II. He enjoyed the favor of both Catholic and Protestant patrons, such as Don Juan José de Austria (1629-1679), illegitimate son of King Philip IV of Spain (cousin of Ladislaus IV), as well as the Dutch court in The Hague. In the National Museum in Warsaw there is his portrait of a man with a cythara (M.Ob.1701 MNW). The costume of the man is obviously Polish or Hungarian from the first half of the 17th century and a similar hat can be seen in an equestrian portrait of a Polish-Lithuanian nobleman (so-called John III Sobieski), in the Goodwood House (oil on canvas, 62.9 x 47.6 cm). The appearance of "Sobieski" with a pearl earring recalls the portrait of Jan Stanisław Jabłonowski (1600-1647) by Rembrandt (National Gallery of Art, 1937.1.78), identified by me. He wears the Spanish costume of the imperial court. From 1638 Jabłonowski was cupbearer of the queen's court and from 1642 he was Crown Sword-bearer. Very similar costumes are visible in an engraving showing the banquet in honor of Marie Louise Gonzaga and the solemn entry of the embassy of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth with Gerard Denhoff, voivode of Pomerania - "The wedding feast of the king and queen of Poland" (Le festin nuptial du roy et de la reine de Pologne) and "The magnificent entry of the Polish ambassadors on September 19, 1645 into the city of Paris" (La magnifique entrée des ambassadeurs de Pologne le 19 septembre 1645 dans la ville de Paris). It was created by François Campion in Paris and probably sponsored by the King of Poland. Gerard, who as voivode of predominantly Protestant Pomerania, usually wore French-style clothing as in his effigy against the view of Malbork Castle by Willem Hondius from 1643 (collar and armor). In his portrait by the Gdańsk painter, painted shortly before his death around 1648 (National Museum in Kraków, MNK I-902), he wears such a costume in the fashion of the late 1640s. In 1645, however, he was the representative of the king and the entire Commonwealth, not just Pomerania, which is why he was depicted wearing national costume. His brother Kasper was a voivode of the predominantly Catholic territories near Sieradz, where the majority of the nobility wear traditional costumes - żupan kaftan and delia coat. Coques frequently used study drawings or perhaps even ready-made canvases as models. In the mentioned equestrian portrait from Goodwood House he reused the composition most likely introduced by Peter Paul Rubens in his portrait of Don Rodrigo Calderón, Count of Oliva on horseback, favorite minister of the Duke of Lerma, painted around 1615 (Windsor Castle, RCIN 404393). It was repeated in the portraits of Sigismund III by Cornelis de Vos (Nationalmuseum in Stockholm, NMGrh 2012) and his son Prince Ladislaus Sigismund by Rubens' studio (Wawel Royal Castle, 6320), as well as in the portrait of Don Diego Felipez de Guzmán (1580-1655), 1st Marquess of Leganés by Gaspar de Crayer (Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, GG 9112) and Albert VII, Archduke of Austria againts the view of Ostend by circle of Rubens (private collection). Portrait of Beatrice de Cusance (1614-1663), Princess of Cantecroix by Anthony van Dyck from about 1635 (Windsor Castle, RCIN 404404), Coques repeated in his portrait of unidentified ladies in the Czartoryski Museum (XII-262) and private collection (sold at Lempertz Cologne, May 17, 2008). The composition from the portrait of Anne of Austria, Queen of France by workshop of Peter Paul Rubens (Louvre Museum, INV 1794 ; MR 984) he used in his portrait of a seated woman in an interior (private collection, oil on copper, 15.2 x 11.4 cm). It is difficult to imagine that important dignitaries or monarchs would stand for several hours for a portrait as some believe was the practice in the past. These effigies were therefore based on study drawings (or some other effigies like miniatures) prepared by court artists or agents of different workshops, then sent abroad to the best artists. Although there were talented painters and other craftsmen in Poland-Lithuania, their number was not as great as abroad and foreign workshops, as today, undoubtedly offered lower prices, better quality or other factors such as easier distribution of effigies in Europe or speed in execution of work. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, some people, who generally had no idea of Polish-Lithuanian tolerance, diversity and trade, believed that the use of foreign workshops was a sign of the nation's inferiority, unable to produce such goods on its own. They would probably think the same thing about 21st century countries that rely heavily on outsourcing. The man in Polish-Hungarian costume resemble Ernest Magnus Denhoff, voivode of Parnawa, from his portrait created by circle of Daniel Rose in Königsberg in about 1640 (Museum of Warmia and Masuria in Olsztyn, MNO 120 OMO), as well as the effigy of Gerard Denhoff against Malbork Castle by Willem Hondius, brothers of Kasper. He should be identified as the voivode of Sieradz who in 1642 linked up with the most powerful family of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania - the Radziwills, by marrying his son Stanisław (d. 1653) to Princess Anna Euphemia (1628- 1663), daughter of Alexander Louis Radziwill (1594-1654), Grand Marshal of Lithuania. It is also worth noting the resemblance to the effigy of Jean-Michel, Viscount of Cigala from a print made by Nicolas de Larmessin I in Paris around 1690 (National Library of Poland, G.21943/II). According to the description in French under his effigy, Jean-Michel was an important notable of the Ottoman court of Constantinople, but he decided to convert to Christianity and after freeing several Christian slaves, he went to Poland in 1651. There, in Warsaw, around 1654, he was baptized and named Jean-Michel by Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga. Later he served as an artillery captain in the imperial army and in 1662 he went to France, where he was received by Louis XIV. In both cases, the links with the royal court of Poland-Lithuania are undeniable. Since the main dignitaries of the queen's court commissioned their effigies from Coques' workshop around 1642, Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria should also have at least one of her portraits made by this painter. Around 1642 Jan van den Hoecke, a Flemish painter active in Antwerp, created a series of effigies of the queen's brother, Archduke Leopold Wilhelm, in armor (Kunsthistorisches Museum, GG 3284 and sold at Sotheby's London, April 30, 2014, lot 743). Earlier, around 1634-1635, probably also in Antwerp, a full-length portrait of King Ferdinand of Bohemia and Hungary (1608-1657) in national costume (Kunsthistorisches Museum, GG 697) was made. The Habsburgs evidently used the same practice as the monarchs of Poland-Lithuania, so the efforts of some art historians trying to find confirmation that the artist and sitter met in person at the time of the portrait's creation are sometimes futile. In 2014, a portrait of a lady in a black dress by Flemish School, 17th century was put up for sale in Vienna, Austria (oil on canvas, 95 x 74 cm, Dorotheum, June 24, 2014, lot 121). Her rich jewelry and marten fur stoles draped over the woman's shoulders indicate that she is a wealthy aristocrat. It has been suggested that zibellino, that is sable skin of which Poland-Lithuania was a major exporter in the 17th century (except Russia), was a symbol of fertility or was associated with pregnancy and childbirth. On February 7, 1642 a tragedy struck the royal couple of the Commonwealth, their daughter Maria Anna Isabella, born a month earlier (January 8, 1642), died. The princess's godfather was Ladislaus' cousin, King Philip IV of Spain, who was replaced by an unknown envoy at the baptism ceremony on January 11, 1642 at the Royal Castle in Warsaw. The body of Maria Anna Isabella was transported to Kraków, where her funeral took place on April 13, 1642 at Wawel Cathedral. A book, most likely a prayer book, lies on a table next to the woman. Her costume resembles that seen in a portrait of an unknown woman called Mary Hawtrey (1598-1661), Lady Bankes by the Flemish painter (Sudbury Hall, Derbyshire, NT 653181), generally dated to the 1640s, as well as a portrait of the king's mistress Jadwiga Wypyska née Łuszkowska holding a fan by Rembrandt and workshop, dated '1643' (private collection), identified by me. These clothes are most likely reminiscent of Italian Renaissance fashion, visible in the portrait of a young lady, better known as Antea, by Parmigianino (Museo di Capodimonte in Naples, Q 108). The style of the painting is very similar to that of a portrait of a woman holding a fan, attributed to Gonzales Coques (sold at Millon & Associés, Hôtel Drouot, June 22, 2022, lot 35) and the portrait of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm by Coques (Kunsthistorisches Museum, GG 5461). The features of the woman with the protruding lower lip are clearly those of the Habsburgs and she closely resembles Cecilia Renata from her effigies by workshop of Frans Luycx (Wilanów Palace, Wil.1144 and Alte Pinakothek in Munich, 6781), as well as portraits by court painter Peter Danckerts de Rij.
Portrait of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria (1611-1644) by Gonzales Coques, ca. 1642, Private collection.
Portrait of Kasper Denhoff (1588-1645), voivode of Sieradz or Jean-Michel, Viscount of Cigala by Gonzales Coques, ca. 1642 or after 1651, Private collection.
Equestrian portrait of a Polish-Lithuanian nobleman, possibly Jan Stanisław Jabłonowski (1600-1647) by Gonzales Coques, ca. 1642, Goodwood House.
Portraits of King Ladislaus IV Vasa and his sister Infanta Anna Catherine Constance Vasa by Gaspar de Crayer
On October 6, 1641, in the courtyard of the Royal Castle in Warsaw, Frederick William (1620-1688), hereditary Margrave of Brandenburg, Elector of Brandenburg and Duke of Prussia, paid homage to the elected monarch of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth Ladislaus IV Vasa. He had done so in person and not, as he had requested, through an authorized representative, due to objections raised in Poland. The parliament wanted to tighten the conditions for granting the fief, pointing out that Frederick William's father was evading the fulfillment of his fief duties (after "Warmia i Mazury" by Stanisława Zajchowska, Maria Kiełczewska-Zaleska, Volume 1, p. 140).
"Although Electors of the Holy Roman Empire, Frederick William's predecessors were exceedingly cautious, and did not play an influential role in German politics, remaining among the second tier of German princes. Their territories were relatively small and poor, scattered across the north German plain, without natural defences. Brandenburg was known as "the sandbox of Europe" because of its poor soil. In total, these territories had a population of about 1.5 million in 1648, and the Elector's capital of Berlin was a smallish town of about 12,000. Prussia was a somewhat more promising territory, as it had several large and prosperous towns, whose wealth was generated by the lucrative trade in Polish wheat shipped down rivers to the Baltic coast where it was loaded onto ships bound for Western Europe" (after "Kings and Their Sons in Early Modern Europe" by Mark Konnert, p. 168). However, as a hereditary and increasingly authoritarian ruler, he had a certain advantage over the elective monarchs of the Commonwealth, whose power was limited by the Sejm. The German duke, who dreamed of unifying German-speaking lands and creating an empire, was obviously disgusted by the diversity, laxity and apparent "disorder" of the Commonwealth's royal court during his visit to Warsaw. The feast that followed the tribute was spoiled by a large number of guests, many of whom had no invitation, and poor organization, so that even the king's table was served with barely warm dishes and in small quantities. So, when the next day (October 8, 1641), the elector received the royal court in his headquarters in Ujazdów, he wanted to demonstrate good organization. "A fairly decent and plentiful feast was served. This pleasant atmosphere was disrupted by the news that 20 silver plates had been stolen from the elector". In the following days, other feasts and festivities took place. A magnificent favola drammatica about Aeneas (L'Enea) by Virgilio Puccitelli was performed in Italian and there were fireworks on the Vistula, which however "did not really please the king". On October 10, there were dances at the Warsaw Castle, in which Frederick William also took part. "The Infanta [Anna Catherine Constance] was also present, delighted and deceived by the hope that the elector would ask her to be his life companion", according to Albert Stanislaus Radziwill. However, the infanta's hopes proved illusory. The elector left, without mentioning anything about his matrimonial intentions (after "Polityka pruska ..." by Józef Włodarski, p. 24). Ladislaus' half-sister could offer a substantial dowry, but no significant hereditary territorial claim. Anna Catherine Constance was also Catholic, but apparently, on the Polish side, religion was not a big issue. On December 7, 1646, in The Hague, Frederick William concluded a more politically and territorially advantageous marriage, proposed by the Brandenburg diplomat Joachim Friedrich von Blumenthal, as a partial solution to the Jülich-Cleves-Berg question, with Protestant Princess Louise Henriette of Nassau (1627-1667), daughter of Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange. After the War of the Jülich Succession (1609-1610), the Protestant territories (Cleves, Mark and Ravensburg) passed to Brandenburg and the Catholic territories (Jülich and Berg) were assigned to Palatinate-Neuburg. In 1636, the Wittelsbach dukes of Palatinate-Neuburg set up their headquarters in Düsseldorf, because Jülich-Berg was significantly larger and more important than Neuburg. When after the end of the Thirty Years' War in 1648, Cleves formally passed into the hands of the Elector of Brandenburg, thus becoming an exclave of the Margraviate of Brandenburg, Frederick William also resided there with his wife. At this time, Anna Catherine Constance, who married in Warsaw in 1642 Philip William of Neuburg (1615-1690), son and successor of Wolfgang William (1578-1653), Count Palatine of Neuburg and Duke of Jülich and Berg, frequently resided in nearby Düsseldorf (she was buried in the Jesuit church in Düsseldorf). So the elector and his Polish-Lithuanian would-be fiancée lived not far from each other. The effigies of such a rich princess, sister of two elected Polish-Lithuanian monarchs, cousin of the King of Spain and the Emperor must have been multiple before the Deluge, it is one of the dubious "achievements" of the "Great Elector" and his allies that very little remains today. At the Philadelphia Museum of Art is a portrait of a woman holding a white feather fan, attributed to the Flemish or Dutch school of the 1630s (oil on canvas, 200 x 117.8 cm, W1899-1-2). The painting was purchased with the W. P. Wilstach Fund in 1899 and comes from the collection of French baron, art collector and writer Jean-Charles Davillier (1823-1883). In the 1899 catalog of paintings at the Blakeslee Galleries, the painting was listed as "Portrait of Princess Palatine", which was most likely the traditional title of this painting, and with attribution to the Dutch painter Pieter Codde (no. 34, p. 60-61), which is now rejected. In the same catalog, there was a portrait of Anna Catherine Constance's father-in-law, Wolfgang William, in Spanish costume, from the collection of the Prince of Turn and Saxe, painted by Anthony van Dyck or his workshop (no. 48). This was a copy of a portrait painted by van Dyck around 1628, probably in Antwerp, which comes from the gallery in Düsseldorf, today in the Neuburg State Gallery (402). Although Count Palatine traveled frequently, including several times to Brussels, the painting was most likely made from study drawings or other effigies. The style of the full-length portrait in Philadelphia closely resembles paintings attributed to Gaspar de Crayer (1584-1669), court painter to the governor of the Spanish Netherlands, Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand of Austria, cousin of Anna Catherine Constance. Among the closest analogous works is the full-length portrait of Bishop Antonius Triest (1576-1657) from about 1627-1630 (Museum of Fine Arts Ghent, 1948-Z) and Christ on the cross surrounded by donors, painted between 1630-1658 (Collections of the Public Social Welfare Centre in Brussels, T 20). The woman in the painting closely resembles the Polish-Lithuanian princess in the portraits in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna (GG 1732, GG 5611) and the Alte Pinakothek in Munich (6728). Her costume and pose are also similar to those in the paintings mentioned. Another full-length portrait painted very similarly, both in terms of style and composition, is the portrait of Anna Catherine Constance's half-brother King Ladislaus IV with a greyhound, now kept at the National Institute of Folk Culture in Strážnice (oil on canvas, 224 x 148 cm, 771093). It comes from the collection of the lord of Strážnice - Francesco Magni (Franz Magnis von Straßnitz, 1598-1652), Bohemian-Moravian nobleman from a family of Milanese merchants, older brother of Valeriano Magni (Valerian von Magnis, 1586-1661), Capuchin monk and diplomat at the court of Ladislaus IV. From 1646 to 1649, Francesco was governor of the Duchy of Opole and Racibórz, which had been pledged to Ladislaus IV in 1645 in exchange for the unpaid dowry sums of his mother, his stepmother and his wife, and the loan he had made to the emperor. In 1646 he moved to Warsaw and probably at that time he received the king's portrait, later mentioned in the posthumous inventory of his property in Strážnice on March 12, 1654. In this portrait, the king wears a fashionable French costume of the time - a Parisian-style beaver hat (chapeau à la mousquetaire), a doublet with a number of ribbons with metal tag finials at the waist (aiguillettes) and tight riding boots of the à revers épanoui type (after "Portrait of Władysław IV from the Oval Gallery ..." by Monika Kuhnke, Jacek Żukowski, p. 64, 66, 76). The painting was probably created at the same time as the portrait of Ladislaus at the Royal Castle in Warsaw (ZKW 559 dep.) or the painter used the same set of study drawings or effigies by other court painters. The king and his sister Princess Palatine (Serenissima Principi ac Domina D. ANNÆ CATHARINÆ CONSTANTIÆ Comiti Palatina Rheni ..., as called in a print with her effigy by Dutch engraver Theodor Matham) wear black costumes, which could indicate mourning in the family, perhaps after the death of the king's daughter Maria Anna Isabella (February 7, 1642) or the king's wife Cecilia Renata of Austria (March 24, 1644). Ladislaus' facial features differ slightly from other effigies of the king, which is another indication that the portrait was based on study drawings. The style of the king's image is similar to that of his sister and other mentioned paintings by de Crayer. Certain elements, such as the feathers or the dog, closely resemble the style of a large altar painting by Gaspar, produced around 1638 for Our Lady of St. Peter's Church in Ghent and representing Saint Benedict receiving Totila, king of the Ostrogoths. In this painting the man on the left in front, holding a nadziak war hammer, is dressed in a costume typical of Polish-Lithuanian or Hungarian-Croatian nobles. The painting in Strážnice also recalls the portrait of Ladislaus's artistic agent Jan Bierens (1591-1641) by de Crayer or his workshop (Arnot Art Museum). Besides the permanent agents in the Spanish Netherlands like Bierens and Georges Deschamps, many Commonwealth envoys were engaged in different tasks of commissioning or purchasing works of art for the king. In 1640, Bierens welcomed Krzysztof Korwin Gosiewski (died 1643), voivode of Smolensk and ambassador to France (Sérénissime Xristophorus Corvinus Gosiewski, palatin de Smolenskouw etc., ambassadeur extraordinaire du Roy de Poloigne et de Suède vers le Roy de France), who left with him several boxes intended for transport to Poland. During his stay in Antwerp, Korwin Gosiewski submitted a request to Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand for exemptions from customs fees and other municipal taxes. On May 12, 1640, the regent of the Southern Netherlands accepted the free exit of these objects from Antwerp (after "Liber memorialis Erik Duverger", p. 361).
Portrait of King Ladislaus IV Vasa (1595-1648) with a greyhound by Gaspar de Crayer, ca. 1642-1644, National Institute of Folk Culture in Strážnice.
Portrait of Infanta Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (1619-1651), Princess Palatine by Gaspar de Crayer, ca. 1642-1644, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Portraits of Jadwiga Łuszkowska and Jan Wypyski by Rembrandt and workshop
Ladislaus IV Vasa met Jadwiga Łuszkowska when he was in Lviv in 1634 with his half-brothers, John Casimir and Alexander Charles Vasa. The king came to the city due to the uncertain Polish-Ottoman situation and the threat of war.
Jadwiga was born around 1616 in Lviv, as the daughter of a merchant Jan Łuszkowski (died 1627) and his wife Anna (died after 1635). She and her mother were then in serious financial problems, they inherited debts from the deceased Łuszkowski. The cloths that he and his partner bought on credit burned down in Jarosław and barges flowing down the Vistula to Gdańsk that belonged to him, sank. A few days after the king's arrival in Lviv, Anna Łuszkowska arranged for a visit to him, taking her beautiful daughter with her. She must have made a great impression on the king, as shortly after the meeting, the beautiful Jadwiga left the house in which she had lived so far and moved to the royal apartments and her mother Anna began to bring large sums of money to the town hall, paying off the creditors, and soon she bought the entire house, only part of which had belonged to her so far. Anna also received, among others, the right to fell wood for fuel in the royal forests and exemption from municipal taxes. Lviv roared with gossip and envious people, like Rafał Jączyński described Jadwiga as: femina formosa sed vitiata (a beautiful, though spoiled woman). The Grand Chancellor of Lithuania, Albert Stanislaus Radziwill, wrote about her many years later as a woman famous for her shame and infamy. Ladislaus took his mistress with him to Warsaw and gave her rooms on the second floor of the Royal Castle. A few years later, identical rooms, except that on the first floor, will be occupied by his wife Cecilia Renata of Austria. In 1635, Jadwiga gave birth to the king's son, Władysław Konstanty (Ladislaus Constantine Vasa), and soon accompanied the monarch on his journey to Prussia and Gdańsk, being present during the signing of the Polish-Swedish truce in Sztumska Wieś. The French envoy Charles Ogier who saw her in Gdańsk wrote in his diary on February 1, 1636: "After breakfast, I was able to comfortably watch the departure of the king's mistress, whom I greatly wanted to see. She is very beautiful, and also full of great charm, with dark eyes and hair, and a very smooth and fresh complexion. But she does not have full freedom, because she is constantly guarded by men and women". Jadwiga's position offended the conservative Polish nobility, there was talk of debauchery at the Royal Castle, and Ladislaus was called publicus concubinariusi (public adulterer). Senators expressed open dissatisfaction, and even the Church was involved in the matter. The papal nuncio Honorato Visconti said that the beautiful Jadwiga ensnared the king with magic and Primate Jan Wężyk also suspected her of dark powers. The king, however, continued to live with his favourite. The idyll was destroyed by the king's marriage to Archduchess Cecilia Renata in 1637. The new queen, placed in the first-floor chambers just below Jadwiga's chambers, put pressure on Ladislaus to get rid of his beautiful mistress from the court. He, nevertheless, did not want to lose her. She moves first to the royal Ujazdów Castle in Warsaw. When the furious queen learns about the still-ongoing romance orders Łuszkowska to be sent back to Lviv. Soon the Ujazdów Castle was to be decorated with large canvases glorifying the queen, described in Adam Jarzębski's "Short Description of Warsaw" from 1643, who knows, maybe created by Rembrandt. Economically, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was strongly associated with the Dutch Republic, but politically, due to the family ties of the Vasas and the Habsburgs, they were opponents, therefore, no Polish monarch could openly patronize an artist in the Dutch Republic. In 1637 Jadwiga was married to Jan of Wypych Wypyski of Grabie coat of arms, one of king's courtiers, to whom the king gave the land of Merkine in the forests of Neman in Lithuania, his favorite hunting spot. This donation gave rise to a court joke in Latin that the king gave Wypyski not the Merkine land (merecensem) but the harlot's land (meretricensem). Wypyski, who between 1626 and 1628 was a notary at the court, also become standard-bearer of Nur and Royal equerry in charge of the King's stables and he received land in Warsaw. The secretaries and notaries were educated people who knew foreign languages, so was also Wypyski. There is no information whether he had children, it is possible that he preferred men to women, therefore, marrying a king's favourite would not be a great sacrifice for him. Even though that beautiful Jadwiga left the court and the capital with her husband, she was visited by the king whenever possible. He stayed there for several months. Ladislaus IV especially liked hunting and organized hawk and falcon hunts for white herons in order to obtain rajers (long feathers on the head of a heron), as an element of hat decoration. If the heron was not seriously injured, the bird was released. One time the king ordered a golden ring for the released heron to be worn around the the bird's neck with the date May 18, 1647. The same heron was caught with a falcon by king John III Sobieski in July 1677. Łuszkowska was still alive on May 20, 1648, when King Ladislaus IV died in Merkine. A romantic legend says that the king died in the arms of his beloved Jadwiga. Wypyski died before December 18, 1647, and he was succeeded as starost of Merkine in 1651 by Krzysztof Buchowiecki, therefore the land was ruled by Jadwiga after Wypyski's death. Around 1650, fifteen-year-old Władysław Konstanty, Jadwiga's son, set off, following the custom of the then teenagers from wealthy families, on a journey across Europe. He never returned to Poland. In Europe, he was known under the name of Count de Wasenau. The print by Jean Michel Moreau, created in 1763 (copy in the Slovak National Gallery, inventory number G 2402), is possibly the oldest and most accurate confirmation of ownership of the painting by Rembrandt, known as the Toilet of Bathsheba, today in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Similar paintings are also mentioned in inventories of the collection of Willem Six in Amsterdam in 1734 (sale catalogue: "The History of Bathsheba, by Rembrandt van Rijn") and in the collection of Gerard Bicker van Zwieten in The Hague in 1741 (sale catalogue: "Bathsheba whose hair was cut and whose feet were washed, by two woman, very unusual [Rembrand van Ryn]"), however they could be tantamount to another painting attributed to Rembrandt or his studio with similar dimensions and composition, which is today in the Netherlands (Museum Catharijneconvent in Utrecht, RMCC s172). The latter painting, in Utrecht, is dated to about 1645 and is entitled "Bathsheba at her toilet spied by David" (Batseba bij haar toilet door David bespied, after "De schilderijen van Museum Catharijneconvent", 2002, p. 249). The painting in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, according to Moreau's print, was in 1763 in the Gallery of count Bruhl, Prime Minister of His Majesty King of Poland and Elector of Saxony (D'après le Tableau de Rembrandt, qui est dans la Gallerie de S.E.M.gr Le Comte de Bruhl, Premier Ministre de S. M. Le Roi de Pologne, Electr. de Saxe). During the Seven Years' War (1756-1763), when Prussian army invaded Saxony, he lived mainly in Poland, where in Warsaw he had three palaces - one near the election field at Wola, built in about 1750, one in Młociny, built between 1752-1758, and the largest, former Sandomierski Palace, in the center. Sandomierski Palace was constructed between 1639-42 by Lorenzo de Sent for Crown Grand Chancellor Jerzy Ossoliński, a friend of Ladislaus IV. It cannot be excluded that Bruhl acquired the painting in Poland. Such paintings are documented in the collections of the Commonwealth's magnates in the 17th century. For example, the inventory of the collection of Princess Louise Charlotte Radziwill (1667-1695), drawn up in 1671, lists two paintings of David and Bathsheba: "King David seeing Uriah's wife from the palace" (348/1) and "King David with Uriah's wife, gilded frames" (811/3). One of the most important works of the court painter of Ladislaus IV, Bartholomeus Strobel, from the early period of his work, is also "David and Bathsheba". Strobel's painting, now kept at Mnichovo Hradiště Castle in Czechia, was painted for the Wrocław canon Philipp Jakob von Jerin and signed by the artist (B. Strobel pinxit et d.d.Phil.Iac. / a Ierin Canonico Wratislauiensi. / Kal.Maij.Anno 1630). Like the painting in the Prado, it was filled with disguised effigies of ladies of the imperial court in Prague or rich Wrocław patricians. King David is almost invisible standing on the high terrace to the left. The ruins of the amphitheater and the obelisk closely resemble the structures shown in the portrait of Royal jeweller Giovanni Jacopo Caraglio by Paris Bordone (Wawel Royal Castle). In the center of the compostion, among the dense forest, sits Bathsheba, naked, while her servants are brushing her "Venetian blond" hair and cutting her nails, exactly as in the painting representing Zuzanna Orłowska, mistress of King Sigismund II Augustus, as Bathing Susanna by Jacopo Tintoretto (Louvre Museum). A partridge at the feet of Susanna, a symbol of sexual desire, is in Rembrandt's painting replaced with a peacock, the symbol of immortality (after "Signs & Symbols in Christian Art" by George Ferguson, p. 23). Since the bird sits on the nest with its partner, it is a symbol of eternal love and partnership. The old woman with glasses cutting Bathsheba's nails is very similar to the one depicted in a drawing by Rembrandt from the collection of Prince Henryk Lubomirski (1777-1850) in Lviv, today in the Ossolineum (Lubomirski Museum) in Wrocław. It is most probably the mother of woman depicted as Bathsheba. Interestingly, the same collection also includes another drawing by Rembrandt, showing a woman holding a child and dated to around 1635, when Jadwiga gave birth to a son. So were these drawings preparatory works to the images of the royal mistress, her newborn son and her mother sent to Poland for approval? According to the Bible, king David, whilst walking on the palace roof, accidentally espies the beautiful Bathsheba, the wife of a loyal soldier in his army, bathing. He desired her and made her pregnant. The painting is an allusion, exacly as effigy of Katarzyna Telniczanka, mistress of king Sigismund I, as Bathsheba by Lucas Cranach the Elder (Gemäldegalerie in Berlin) and has similar composition. Łuszkowska, who lived in royal residencies, knew perfectly well the paintings from the royal collection, which were often made in series for various relatives. The painting from the Bruhl collection was signed and dated by the artist: Rembrandt. ft/1643. The woman, though with her hair not bleached, was also depicted in a portrait painting by Rembrandt, also created in 1643 (Rembrandt f. 1643), which is today in the Gemäldegalerie in Berlin. The work most likely entered the collection of Frederick III of Prussia in the Potsdam City Palace between 1689 and 1698. The palace in Potsdam was constructed on the site of an earlier edifice from 1662 to 1669 built for Frederick's father Frederick William (1620-1688), Elector of Brandenburg and Duke of Prussia, who in 1656, during the Deluge, according to Wawrzyniec Jan Rudawski, "took to Prussia as a spoil, the most valuable paintings and silverware of the royal table". The woman cannot be Rembrandt's wife as she died on 14 June 1642. She wears a hat, most probably a fur hat, adorned with jewels, very similar to kołpaczek from Polish traditional women's costume. Her pose is identical as in the painting from the Bruhl collection. She was also represented in another painting by Rembrandt and his workshop, also created in 1643 (Rembrandt f / 1643), today in the private collection. Her hair are bleached, she is holding a fan and her outfit is similar to that in the Berlin painting. She wears a toque embroidered with gold, similar to Italian balzo visible in the portrait of Queen Bona Sforza by Titian, identified by me (private collection), a hat decoration (egreta) with a feather, a coat of expensive fabric lined with fur and jewels. The attire in both painting is very similar to the costume of Raina Movila (Regina Mohylanka) of Moldavia (ca. 1589-1619), Princess Vyshnevetska (portrait in the National Historical Museum of Ukraine), who died in Vyshnivets (about 150 km east of Lviv) or to the costumes of ladies in the painting "Finding of the Cross" by Tomasz Muszyński in Lublin (south-eastern Poland), created between 1654-1658. While in 1642 Queen of Poland, Cecilia Renata of Austria, asked her brother to send her Dutch lace and a doll dressed in fashionable French attire and portraits of both the queen and her sister-in-law Anna Catherine Constance by Dutch painter Peter Danckers de Rij show the abundance of lace and French costumes, the woman from Rembrandt's paintings opted for eastern costume. The sitter in all three mentioned paintings bear a resemblance to the portrait of a boy, identified as portrait of Władysław Konstanty, in the National Gallery in Prague (O 8675). A companion piece to the portrait holding a fan is a portrait of a man with a hawk (The falconer), also in private collection and also signed and dated by the artist ([Re]mbrandt f 1643). This is the woman's husband. If Wypyski started his career at the court in 1626 at the age of around 20, then he was around 37 years old in 1643. The high-flying hawk is a symbol of royalty (and thus authority, sovereignty). The man's invites to hunt and pointing at the woman in the pendant portrait.
Old lady with glasses by Rembrandt, ca. 1635, Ossolineum in Wrocław.
Woman holding a child by Rembrandt, ca. 1635, Ossolineum in Wrocław.
Portrait of Jadwiga Wypyska née Łuszkowska (ca. 1616 - after 1648) in a black hat by Rembrandt, 1643, Gemäldegalerie in Berlin.
Portrait of Jadwiga Wypyska née Łuszkowska (ca. 1616 - after 1648) as bathing Bathsheba by Rembrandt, 1643, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Portrait of Jan Wypyski, starost of Merkine with a hawk by Rembrandt and workshop, 1643, Private collection.
Portrait of Jadwiga Wypyska née Łuszkowska (ca. 1616 - after 1648) holding a fan by Rembrandt and workshop, 1643, Private collection.
Portrait of Constantia Kerschenstein née Czirenberg by Pieter Claesz. Soutman
"You ask why Constantia is surrounded by the glory of this century? She is the greatest among the Muses, as well as the greatest among the Charites [Graces], She is superior than men and silences the gods. With her speech, faithfulness, voice, and extraordinary charm, she is praised by Gdańsk and all of Poland admires her. This is how the mortals can rise above the gods" (AN quæ sit CONSTANTIA secli gloriæ quæris? / Maxima Musarum, Maxima & est Charitum. / Hæc homines vincit, contrabit ora Deorum / Eloquio, fidibus, voce, lepore sibi; / Suspicit hanc Gedanum, celebratqe; Polonia tota, / Hoc est mortales, hoc superare Deos) (partially after the Polish translation by Andrzej Januszajtis in "Kwiaty dla Konstancji"), praises the famous singer Constantia Czirenberg (1605-1653), priest Lorenzo Frissone (Laurentius Frissone). This dedication was published in Milan in 1626 in "The Flowers of the Most Illustrious Men" (Flores praestantissimorum virorum) by Filippo Lomazzo (Philippo Lomatio).
Constantia, daughter of Johann Czirenberg (Zierenberg), mayor and royal burgrave of Gdańsk, the main port of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and Anna Kerl, received an excellent education. She was fluent in German, Polish, French, Italian and Latin, played the clavichord and accompanied herself to the singing. She also drew, painted and embroidered beautifully. Her father, who studied in Gdańsk, Kraków and Leipzig, was one of the most active leaders of the Calvinists and wrote polemical theological writings against the leaders of the Gdańsk Lutherans. In 1628, Constantia married Sigismund Kerschenstein (also Siegmund, Zygmunt Kirszensztein or Kerssenstein; 1583-1644) with whom she had three children: Ludwig (born 1629, who on October 20, 1656 married in Amsterdam Maria von Rote), Constantia (1631) and Anna (1633). Known for her beauty and musical talent, Czirenbergówna or Kerschensteinowa, as she is also known in Poland, quickly attracted the attention of a famous patron and connoisseur of music and Italian opera, Prince Ladislaus Sigismund Vasa. They probably met for the first time during his visit to Gdańsk in 1623, shortly before his departure for the Spanish Netherlands and Italy (1624-1625), and it was undoubtedly the prince who recommended her in Italy. Lomazzo's dedication in the mentioned work seems to confirm this, as well as the fact that she also performed in Warsaw or Kraków, at the court of Sigismund III, before she left for Italy: "The glory of Your virtues could not be contained within the borders of Poland, even the widest ones, so here, along with the fame and most faithful recommendation of Your name, it reached Italy and Milan. [...] That you have the most skillful hands, the most dexterous fingers for playing, a nightingale's throat for singing, so that in singing with the most eminent artists and masters of the Invincible King of Poland and Sweden and masters of his court, as the Prince himself judged with delight, you do not hesitate to compete". She probably entertained Ladislaus, already king, with her music when he was her father's guest during his visit to Gdańsk in 1634. During this sojourn, the king commissioned numerous portraits and other works of art from local artists, as well as from the Netherlands (most likely including Claes Jansz. Visscher's print based on a drawing or painting by Pieter Claesz. Soutman). Charles Ogier (1595-1654), secretary to the French envoy Claude de Mesmes, Count of Avaux, who met her in November 1635, wrote in his diary that "she has an extremely beautiful voice and sings in the Italian way". In his Caroli Ogerii Ephemerides ..., published in Paris in 1656, he also includes a poem dedicated to her - Sireni Balthicæ Constantia Sirenbergiæ, in which he calls her the Siren of the Baltic and Sarmatia (Siren Baltica, Sarmaticas; Sirenberg - siren mountain in German), who seduced the king with her voice (Quin ipsum, spiraret adhuc cum pectore Martem, VLADISLAVM carmine distinuit. Ille tuis pronam, CONSTANTIA, cantibus aurem Præbuit, ad laudes obstupuitque suas, p. 506-507). During the king's visit to the city in 1636, at a feast at Brigida Schwartzwald's house on February 7, Ladislaus showed her special consideration "and wished that only Constantia would be seated at the head of the table". Ogier and the French envoy were guests at her house, and in a note from April 29, 1636, he adds: "I spent the afternoon with Mrs. Constantia, who, as usual, was sitting up with her sick husband. While he was telling me interesting things, she was showing me her feminine ornaments, such as chains, armlets, tiaras, and lots of white, but not round, pearls; she informed me about the different costumes of her and the Polish nation. And when she placed before my eyes the caps, gloves, belts and other such things that she herself had woven and decorated with embroidery, it seemed as if I had stumbled upon Pallada herself" (after Polish translation by Zenon Gołaszewski). Like the majority of Gdańsk ladies, she probably preferred local fashion with a ruff and beaded or jeweled bonnet, but as Netherlandish influences were important in Gdańsk then, she probably also dressed in the Dutch or Flemish style. Her family lived in a house built or rebuilt around 1620 by Abraham van den Blocke, an architect and sculptor of Flemish origin. A beautiful Dutch-Flemish style marble epithaph of Constantia's grandfather and grandmother in St. Mary's Church in Gdańsk, made in 1616, is also attributed to Abraham van den Blocke. She died in 1653, during the plague, and was also buried in St. Mary's Church. There must have been multiple effigies of such a star of 17th century music. At that time, portraits of singers were made by the best artists, such as Andrea Sacchi in Rome, who in 1641 painted the castrato singer Marc'Antonio Pasqualini (1614-1691), who in 1634 performed before the king's brother Alexander Charles. The king undoubtedly owned several portraits of Czirenbergówna, but today none is known. Even if the royal collections were largely dispersed or destroyed, like the magnificent opera hall built around 1635 at the Royal Castle in Warsaw by the Italian architect, engineer and scenographer Agostino Locci, some remnants must have survived. In the National Museum in Warsaw there is a portrait of a woman attributed to Pieter Claesz. Soutman, who frequently worked for Ladislaus IV (oil on panel, 69 x 58.7 cm, M.Ob.528 MNW, deposited at the Palace on the Isle in Warsaw, Dep 928). The painting come from the collection of the last elected monarch of the Commonwealth Stanislaus Augustus Poniatowski and at the bottom right, red inventory number of his gallery - 1374, is still visible. In the 1795 catalog of the king's collection, it was listed as "Half-length portrait of a woman, old costume, large ruff at the collar, on wood" (Portrait de femme a mi corps, costume ancien, large fraise au col, sur bois), without attribution. Its earlier history is unknown, so it cannot be ruled out that it came from historical royal collections that survived the Deluge (1655-1660) and subsequent invasions. The woman proudly displays her rich costume, including lace bonnet and cuffs that she probably made herself. A sheer black veil and dark dress indicate that she is likely in mourning. According to an original Latin inscription in the center right, barely visible today, the woman was 38 years old in 1644 (Ætatis / suæ 38 / 1644), exactly like Kerschensteinowa, who, when her husband died on May 22, 1644, could still claim to be 38 years old (born October 6, 1605). Her costume is northern in style, but similar ones were popular throughout the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in the first half of the 17th century, as shown for example in the Kraków painter's portrait of a noble family as donors dating from around 1620 (National Museum in Kraków). Similar to many other works, it was commissioned in the Netherlands, either by the king or Constantia, due to the good sea connection between Gdańsk and Amsterdam (regular grain transports) and the very probably competitive prices offered by painters and other qualified craftsmen. As a good example of such a practice, we can cite that before 1643 the title page of Diego Ufano's Tratado dela artilleria yuso della platicado ..., translated from German into Polish by Abraham Ciświcki, with effigy of Ladislaus IV Vasa and view of Smolensk (Archelia albo Artilleria, to iest Fvndamentalna Y Doskonała Informacya o Strzelbie, published in Leszno in 1643), was created by Crispijn van de Passe the Younger (signed: C. de Pas Inventer), who was active in Amsterdam from 1639, where he founded his own printing and publishing firm (compare "Printmaking in the Age of Rembrandt" by Clifford S. Ackley, p. 94).
Portrait of the singer Constantia Kerschenstein née Czirenberg (1605-1653), aged 38, in mourning by Pieter Claesz. Soutman, 1644, National Museum in Warsaw.
Cartouche with flowers and portrait of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria by Daniel Seghers and Gaspar de Crayer
"The rooms are large, they have all kinds of luxury. Furniture, master's crafts, Netherlandish golden arts; on this side and on the other side, next to the most glorious patron, there is Saint Cecilia's union, heavenly lily, where the capella [musical ensemble] sings vespers, royally: gioia bella! [beautiful joy]" (Pokoje pomiernie wielkie, / Ale w nich dostatki wszelkie, / Ochędóstwa, kunszty pańskie, / Złote sztuki niderlandzkie; / Po tej i po drugiej stronie, / Przy najaśniejszej patronie, / Tam jest świętej Cecylijej / Związek, niebieskiej lilijej, / Gdzie śpiewa nieszpór capella / Pokrólewsku: gioia bella!), describes the palace hall of the Villa Regia in Warsaw, Adam Jarzębski in his "The Main Road, or a Short Description of Warsaw" (Gościniec abo krótkie opisanie Warszawy) from 1643 (verses 1953-1962).
The painting, probably a ceiling painting on canvas or a fresco, depicted the marriage of the patron saint of singers and musicians. This scene must have been commissioned by Ladislaus IV Vasa, a great patron of the arts and connoisseur of music and opera, also to honor the new Queen Cecilia Reanta of Austria. It is possible that the saint had the features of the queen, however nothing else is known about this painting. At that time, even the Queen of England was depicted in the guise of a Christian saint by van Dyck. Possible authors included painters from the king's court, representing the main schools of Baroque painting – Central European, Italian, Flemish and Dutch. If it was a painting on canvas, it is possible that it was made abroad, in Flanders, the Netherlands or Italy. It was before the marriage with his cousin in 1637 (Cecilia Renata was a daughter of Ladislaus' uncle and they were related through Anna Jagellonica, queen of Germany, Bohemia and Hungary), that the king decided to rebuild the palace. On the occasion of the arrival, marriage and coronation of Cecilia Renata, Ladislaus also ordered to stage an opera dedicated to his wife and referring to her patron, "Saint Cecilia" (La S. Cecilia : Dramma Mvsicale, Con Gl'Intermedii Favolosi Rapresentato Nelle Reali Nozze, Delle Maesta Di Polonia E Svezia Vladislao IV E Cecilia Renata). The libretto was written by Virgilio Puccitelli, the royal secretary, the music was composed by Marco Scacchi, the royal bandmaster and the scenography and construction of the stage machines were entrusted to Agostino Locci. The king and queen shared the love for music and on another occasion, in 1638, there was a concert for violin and twelve trumpets. Cecilia Renata and Ladislaus, sailing on the Vistula by ship, could listen to music coming from both banks of the river. There were violinists on one side and trumpeters on the other (after "Wkład królowej Cecylii Renaty ..." by Anna Burkietowicz, p. 19). At this time, portraits and other paintings were frequently sent to different family members, so the Austrian and Spanish Habsburgs most likely received many effigies of Cecilia Renata. The 1659 inventory (Inventarium) of Archduke Leopold William's collections at the Stallburg in Vienna lists two full-length portraits of his sister, when she was queen (no. 811) and when she was archduchess (no. 813), both made by Frans Luycx and the full-length portrait of his cousin Infanta Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (no. 812), also by Luycx, which is now in the Kunsthistorisches Museum (GG 1732). The inventory also lists a portrait of "long Peter", the painter of the King of Poland (langen Peter, Königs in Pohlen Mahlers, No. 722), most probably Pieter Claesz. Soutman, by Anthony van Dyck, probably the painting today in the Louvre (INV 1248 ; MR 671) or a copy of it, and a copy of a miraculous image of the Virgin and Child from Poland, painted on copper, by an unknown painter (No. 281) (compare "Inventar und Kunstsammlung des Erzherzogs Leopold Wilhelm ..." by Adolf Berger). Interestingly, the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna has preserved only one image of the Polish queen, which can surely be considered her portrait, bearing an inscription in Italian on the back: LA REGINA CECILIA RENATA DI POLONIA 1642 (GG 8291), most likely painted by workshop of Frans Luycx, the other three are effigies of her sister-in-law Anna Catherine Constance (GG 1732, GG 5611, GG 7944), identified by me. In the Viennese museum there is an effigy which is similar to other effigies of Cecilia Renata - Female portrait in a wreath of flowers (oil on panel, 76.5 x 58 cm, GG 9105). It comes from the collection of Archduke Leopold William and in the 1659 inventory it was listed as "48. An effigy in oil painting on wood of a lady, around her three festoons with different flowers. [...] The portrait is by an unknown painter, but the flowers are by F. Segers, Jesuit" (48. Ein Contrafäit von Öhlfarb auff Holcz einer Damen, darumben drey Festonen mitt vnderschiedtlichen Blumen. [...] Das Contrafäit von einem vnbekhandten Mahler, die Blumen aber vom F. Segers, Jesuitter.), that is to say Daniel Seghers (1590-1661), mainly active in Antwerp. Seghers specialized in flower still lifes, so he frequently cooperated with other painters, such as Cornelis Schut, Peter Paul Rubens, Gonzales Coques and others, who painted the central figurative scene or the portrait. A fairly comparable portrait of the queen's brother by Seghers from 1647 to 1651, in the form of a bust (painted by Jan van den Hoecke), is today in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence (Inv. 1890, 1085). It was bequeathed to Emperor Leopold I in 1662. The woman in this portrait is also identified as Cecilia Renata's sister, Archduchess Maria Anna (1610-1665), Electress of Bavaria, but she was most often depicted in Central European costume inspired by Spanish or Italian fashion (e.g. paintings by Joachim von Sandrart from 1643 and after - Kunsthistorisches Museum, GG 8034 and Alte Pinakothek in Munich, 3093) and not French, like the woman in this painting. Her costume particularly resembles that represented in a portrait of Ladislaus IV's cousin, Anne of Austria (1601-1666), Queen of France at the Visitandine monastery in Warsaw. The portrait of the Queen of France was most likely painted by Charles Beaubrun in the late 1630s or early 1640s, like similar paintings of Anne from 1638 and 1639. Close to her heart, as in many effigies of Cecilia Renata's husband, for example in Wilanów Palace (Wil.1143) and the Royal Castle in Warsaw (ZKW 559 dep.) or the portrait of the queen in the Nationalmuseum in Stockholm (Gripsholm Castle, NMGrh 1417), we see a jewel on a ribbon. It is a "favor" said to indicate a love knot and 14 objects of jewelry evoking favors are mentioned in the king's inventory of 1646. "Favors in a broader sense, gioie da petto, elaborated love jewels worn on the left breast or left shoulder were promoted in the Rzeczpospolita [Commonwealth] for the first time by queens Anna and Constance of Austria" (after "Favors and love locks ..." by Jacek Żukowski, p. 46). The woman in this portrait closely resembles the Queen of Poland in the mentioned portrait in Stockholm, a painting in Wilanów (Wil.1144), as well as effigies in the Victoria and Albert Museum (P.57-1929) and Gripsholm Castle (Nationalmuseum, NMGrh 299). The whole composition with flowers may refer to Cecilia Renata's patron saint - Saint Cecilia. "In Jacobus de Voragine's Legenda Aurea and its derivative, Chaucer's Second Nun's Tale, crowns of lilies and roses are brought by an angel to the future martyrs Cecilia and her husband after she has converted him to Christianity and continence" (after "St. Cecilia's Garlands and Their Roman Origin" by John S. P. Tatlock, p. 169). We can see similar floral wreaths with roses in several paintings depicting the saint, such as Saint Cecilia in a flower border by Michel Bouillon, mid-17th century (Setdart Auction House in Barcelona, September 7, 2022, lot 79), Saint Cecilia wearing a crown of flowers by Cesare Dandini, 1640s (Dorotheum in Vienna, April 18, 2012, lot 743), Saint Cecilia wearing a crown of flowers (Personification of music) by Antonio Franchi, ca. 1650 (Sotheby's London, July 8, 2004, lot 159), Saint Cecilia wearing a crown of flowers and playing an organ by Onorio Marinari or circle, ca. 1686 (Dorotheum in Vienna, December 14, 2010, lot 189) or Saint Cecilia playing an organ by Sebastiano Conca, 1735-1745 (Sotheby's New York, July 7, 2016, lot 189). Daniel Seghers' contacts with clients from Poland-Lithuania are well documented. In 1637 Jan Zawadzki (died in 1645), envoy of Ladislaus IV returning from Paris, purchased the painting representing: "A garland of roses with Jesus and Saint John [the Baptist] by Mr. [Cornelis] Schut for the ambassador Sawaski, who presented it to the King of Poland" (Een feston van Roosen met Jezus en S. Jan van Sr. Schut voor den Ambassadeur Sawaski die het heeft geschonken aen den koning van Polen). Seghers created a cartouche for Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga in which was Saint Anne by Quellinus (December 17-20 1645), most probably the painting in the Worcester Art Museum (1966.37), painted with Erasmus Quellinus the Younger. In 1645 the other king's envoy - Krzysztof Opaliński (1609-1655), voivode of Poznań, purchased in Antwerp numerous paintings, originals and copies "from the masters themselves. The Jesuits helped me in this", as he wrote in a letter to his brother dated October 9 (compare "Rubens w Polsce" by Juliusz A. Chrościcki, p. 181). On this occasion, Opaliński commissioned a print from Lucas Vorsterman (National Museum in Kraków, MNK III-ryc.-40483), a study for which was produced by Abraham van Diepenbeeck (Czartoryski Museum, MNK XV-R.1111). Around that time, van Diepenbeeck created another study for a print or altar painting depicting the enthroned Madonna and Child worshiped by three saints (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, RP-T-1985-118). The first figure on the left holding a crucifix is identified as possibly representing Saint Henry of Germany, but a lily and an eastern hat at his knees indicate that he is Saint Casimir Jagiellon (compare with the effigy of this saint published in Douai in 1638, MNK III-ryc.-28781). The author of the portrait of Queen Cecilia Renata in Vienna was not mentioned in the 1659 inventory of her brother's collection, which is another indication that the author of this inventory was his Austrian "valet and treasurer" (Kammerdiener und Schatzmeister) Christian Wasserfass von Hohenbrunn. He probably knew Seghers, who was a popular painter at that time. If the painting depicted the Electess of Bavaria, who was still living at the time of the document's creation (died 1665), he should also recognize her (Cecilia Renata died 15 years earlier). This subtly painted image is reminiscent of Anthony van Dyck's portrait of Marie de Raet, painted in 1631 (The Wallace Collection, P79). It is therefore possible that it was made by Abraham van Diepenbeeck, whose work was influenced by Rubens and van Dyck, however, the works of another painter who draw inspiration from van Dyck's style seem closer - Gaspar de Crayer, who was a painter of the queen's Spanish relatives. Among the closest we can cite the equestrian portrait of King Philip IV of Spain, from 1628-1632 (Prado Museum in Madrid, P001553) and especially signed work - Saint Ambrose from about 1655 (Prado, P005198). The way the painter painted the lace and the hair is very similar. The nobles of the Commonwealth enjoyed a well-deserved reputation as good patrons. "Prince Samaske" (Zamoyski?), probably from the entourage of Queen Marie Louise, negotiated with Matthijs Musson, painter and art dealer based in Antwerp, and Gillis van Habbeke, active as a tapestry weaver in Brussels from at least 1643, for tapestries. While de Crayer wrote to Musson from Brussels in December 1645 that they were expecting Poles there, who had already seen his painting of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary in Lier and requested a copy, so he also prepared other things (after "Galerie obrazów ..." by Teresa Sulerzyska, p. 96). It was most likely customers from Poland-Lithuania who ordered around 1643 a series of three small tondo engravings depicting three goddesses from the Judgment of Paris - Venus, Juno and Minerva, which comes from the Krasiński collection in Warsaw (National Library of Poland, G.2693/Sz, G.2694/Sz, G.2691/Sz). They were produced by Clement de Jonghe (1624-1677), friend of Rembrandt, active in Amsterdam from 1643. The style of the engravings is comparable to the drawings signed or attributed to Hans Krieg (died between 1643 and 1647), painter and draftsman active in Gdańsk, probably son of Mennonite refugees from the Netherlands or Germany. The print depicting Venus is particularly interesting because it depicts the goddess of love as queen (Venus Regina), holding a scepter, most probably inspired by the baroque effigies of Mary, Queen of Heaven (Regina Cæli) (compare with the print by Cornelis Galle the Elder from the first half of the 17th century). Accompanied by her son Cupid, they both admire their vast lands: the Realm of Venus.
The Queen Venus (Venus Regina) by Clement de Jonghe after Hans Krieg, ca. 1643, National Library of Poland.
Cartouche with flowers and portrait of Queen Cecilia Renata of Austria (1611-1644) by Daniel Seghers and Gaspar de Crayer, ca. 1642-1645, Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
Cartouche with flowers and the Education of the Virgin by Daniel Seghers and Erasmus Quellinus II, ca. 1645, Worcester Art Museum.
Virgin and Child enthroned with Saint Casimir by Abraham van Diepenbeeck, mid-17th century, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam.
Allegorical portrait of Stanisław Lubomirski by Gregorio Preti or workshop
The main architectural foundations of Stanisław Lubomirski (1583-1649), voivode of Kraków, are linked to Italian culture. The architect serving the voivode was the Italian Matteo Trapola (d. 1637), who designed many buildings in Nowy Wiśnicz, including the Church of the Carmelite Monastery founded by Stanisław in 1621 to commemorate the victory over the Empire Ottoman during the Battle of Khotyn (built between 1622 and 1630). Trapola also rebuilt Wiśnicz Castle (1615-1621) and other residences of the magnate such as Łańcut Castle (1629-1641) and Decius Villa in Wola Justowska near Kraków (1630). Giovanni Battista Falconi (d. 1660) decorated the Lubomirski residences in Wiśnicz and Łańcut, as well as the family chapel in Niepołomice with beautiful stucco decorations. The Italian architect Andrea Spezza (d. 1628), who designed the Wallenstein Palace in Prague, is considered the author of the project for the parish church in Wiśnicz, founded by Stanisław in 1620 and consecrated in 1647 (compare "Baroque architecture ..." by Piotr S. Szlezynger, p. 113).
In May 1649, the voivode, who maintained contacts with the Rakoczi family, intervened with Sebastiano Sala (d. 1652), a sculptor from Lugano operating in Kraków, so that the master, who was in the royal service, accepted the order to make the tombstone of George I Rakoczi (1593-1648), prince of Transylvania, in Alba Iulia. Connections to Italian culture are also present in the paintings commissioned by Lubomirski. For example, the large allegorical portrait of Stanisław as the triumphator in the 1621 war against the Ottoman Empire, is obviously Italian in style, but no Italian painters working in Wiśnicz or other estates of the voivode are known. This painting in now kept at Wilanów Palace in Warsaw (oil on canvas, 292 x 176 cm, Wil.1565). Another full-length portrait of Stanisław, attributed to Stanisław Kostecki (National Museum in Warsaw, 128870/2 MNW), is not similar and no painter active in the Commonwealth at that time appears to have authored the work. The painting is closer to the Roman school, inspired by Caravaggio, with strong contrasts of light and shadow, which exclude Tommaso Dolabella, trained in Venice, and his workshop as potential authors. The Lubomirskis, as devout Catholics, maintained relations with Rome. In 1634, Pope Urban VIII presented the Church of the Dominican Sisters in Kraków, founded in 1621 by Stanisław's mother, Anna Lubomirska née Branicka (1562-1639), with a painting of Our Lady of the Snows (Salus Populi Romani) and the following year relics of Saint Alexander and the head of one of Saint Ursula's companions were offered by the Pope and brought from Rome by the Discalced Carmelites. Similar to King Sigismund III and Ladislaus IV, the Lubomirskis undoubtedly also commissioned paintings from Rome. The Wilanów painting most closely resembles works attributed to Gregorio Preti (1603-1672), a painter active in Rome from 1624 and who, between 1632 and 1636, was the teacher of his famous younger brother Mattia (1613-1699). Among the closest we can cite the Disrobing of Christ with a man in Polish-Lithuanian or Hungarian-Croatian costume (Hôtel Drouot in Paris, March 28, 2023, lot 18), the Meeting of Saint Dominic and Saint Francis of Assisi (Quadri e Lanzi in Rome, February 27, 2018, lot 167) and Pope Celestine V (1215-1296) refuses the papal tiara (Wannenes Art Auctions in Genoa, December 21, 2020, lot 1230), as well as the painter's self-portrait in Allegory of the Five Senses, painted between 1641-1642 (Palazzo Barberini in Rome, inv. 4660). This truly princely allegory can be dated to around 1647, when Stanisław received the princely title from Emperor Ferdinand III. Such portraits were usually ordered in several copies for different residences. Good examples of this practice are the portraits of Mikołaj Hieronim Sieniawski (1645-1683), painted around 1682 and attributed to Mateusz Domaradzki (Wilanów Palace and Olesko Castle).
Allegorical portrait of Stanisław Lubomirski (1583-1649), voivode of Kraków by Gregorio Preti or workshop, ca. 1647, Wilanów Palace in Warsaw.
Portraits of King Ladislaus IV Vasa and Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga by workshop of Giovanni Antonio Galli
Despite their origins in Norhern Europe, the Polish-Lithuanian branch of the Vasa dynasty, similar to the Jagiellons, mainained close relations with the Italian peninsula. Commonwealth aristocrats owned many portraits of famous Italians. The inventory of paintings in the collection of Princess Louise Charlotte Radziwill (1667-1695), drawn up in 1671, lists the portraits of Cardinal Charles Borromeo (188), Marshal Ottavio Piccolomini (243) and Cardinal Jules Mazarin (244) (after "Inwentarz galerii obrazów Radziwiłłów z XVII w." by Teresa Sulerzyska). Although due to the French origin of Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga (from the Nevers branch of the Italian family), effigies of French aristocrats or probably painted in the French style, dominate in this inventory (items 276-291 and items 307-311).
In the collection of Cardinal Antonio Barberini (1607-1671), nephew of Pope Urban VIII, in Palazzo Barberini in Rome there was a portrait of ambassador of King Sigismund of Poland (il ritratto del Sig. re. Ambasciatore di Polonia, inventory 1644, item 108) and the 1649 inventory of the collection of Cardinal Francesco Barberini (1597-1679), another nephew of the pope, contains a large number of Polish-Lithuanian effigies, because as secretary of state he directed the foreign policy of the papacy. He most likely owned a portrait of Chancellor Jerzy Ossoliński (item 819), most probably by painter Antonelli, as well as an engraved portrait of Sigismund III (209) and his large portrait or rather of his successor, Ladislaus IV (782) in red Polish-Lithuanian żupan, who seemed for the author of the inventory to be "dressed like Dante" (del Re di Polonia vestiti tutto di Dante). Another note mentions a portrait of the Polish king in half-figure (822). An engraving depicting the victory of the newly elected monarch over the Muscovite troops who were besieging Smolensk (l'espugnatione dell esercito de Moscoviti dal Re di Polonia, 192), was probably also a gift from Ladislaus. In the collections of Don Taddeo Barberini (1603-1647), Prince of Palestrina and Gonfalonier of the Church, brother of Cardinals Francesco and Antonio, inventoried in the years 1648-1649, is the portrait of an unidentified Polish queen (Hedagres [Edvige-Hedwig?] Regina di Polonia, 305), while Cardinal Francesco's inventory of 1679 mentions "a portrait of a queen of Poland" (il ritratto d'una Regina di Polonia, 112) (after "Biuletyn historii sztuki", Volume 47, p. 153-154). The portrait of Ladislaus IV Vasa in coronation robes and a large crown, attributed to Jan Chrysostom Proszowski, is in the Grand Master's Palace in Valletta, Malta. In the 17th century, like today when wealthy people order highly personalized items from distant locations because of their uniqueness and quality, portraits were commissioned from the best workshops in Europe. In 1646 Pierre Des Noyers, secretary of Queen Marie Louise, wrote that the chapel of the Royal Castle in Warsaw was "embellished with numerous paintings by the most famous painters". Four years later, in 1650, the queen ordered in Paris, through Des Noyers, a large painting representing her and her two husbands. The concept of the painting, executed by Justus van Egmont, was developed by Abbot Michel de Marolles - the queen as Roman godess Juno seated between two Jupiters, one celestial (Ladislaus IV Vasa) and the other terrestrial (John Casimir Vasa) - Une Junon représentée assise entre deux Jupiters, l'un céleste et l'autre terrestre. Cette Déesse plus belle qu'elle ne fut jamais sous le visage de la Reine (after "Bulletin de la Société de l'histoire de l'art français", p. 34). This practice was also very beneficial from a logistical point of view for a monarch wishing to glorify his dynasty and his country. Portraits ordered in Paris could be offered to the Queen of France (who was a cousin of the Vasas), or sent further to Madrid, Florence, Rome or London. The monarchs of Poland-Lithuania frequently sent precious and rich gifts to people abroad, such as to mentioned Michel de Marolles, who in 1649 received gilded vases and a gilded and carved silver box from the queen. The Vasas also had a significant collection of ancient sculptures, the majority of which were undoubtedly acquired in Rome. The sculptures in Warsaw and Łobzów were destroyed during the Deluge (1655-1660) and some were looted by Frederick William (1620-1688), Elector of Brandenburg and Duke of Prussia (after "Świat polskich Wazów: eseje", p. 56, 299, 316). In 2022, two portraits of a nobleman and his wife (Ritratto di nobile, Ritratto di gentildonna), attributed to a 17th-century Roman painter, were sold in Rome (oil on canvas, 84 x 67 and 84 x 68 cm, sold at Bolli & Romiti, May 18, 2022, lot 61-62). The two come "from a Roman palace". These paintings reproduce well-known effigies of King Ladislas IV Vasa and his second wife Marie Louise Gonzaga. The portrait of the king is a version of the effigy dating from around 1647, similar to the miniature in the National Museum in Warsaw (Min.726 MNW) and the portrait of the queen is a copy of a painting by Justus van Egmont in Royal Castle in Warsaw (ZKW/2283/ab). In the mentioned miniature Ladislaus has blond hair and mustache, and in the Roman portrait he has dark hair, indicating that the painter copied some general effigies of the king - drawings or prints. It is also possible that the bald Ladislaus wore different colored wigs or dyed his hair and beard, like the viceroy of Naples in 1625. The style of both paintings is closely reminiscent of works attributed to Giovanni Antonio Galli, known as lo Spadarino, a member of the Caravaggisti, who painted the portrait of Ladislaus from the Gundulić collection, now at Kórnik Castle (MK 03369). Among the closest are the very dark portrait of Geronima Giustiniani (1520/30 - ca. 1600) as a widow kept at the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Nancy (inv. 606), painted posthumously before 1637, Ecce Homo from private collection in Madrid (sold at Christie's London, July 7, 2009, lot 22) and a Cherub sold in 2022 (Lucas Aste in Milan, September 20, 2022, lot 90). The portraits are not as finely painted as the mentioned portrait of Ladislaus at Kórnik, so it is possible that they are part of a series of effigies commissioned around 1647 and painted by Spadarino's workshop. Very close to the style of Spadarino and his workshop is also the portrait of Prince-Cardinal John Casimir Vasa with a princely crown, also created at this time, today at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. In 1641, the prince decided to become a Jesuit and arrived in Rome in 1643. He was named cardinal by Innocent X on March 28, 1646. In October 1647, he resigned to stand for election to the Polish-Lithuanian throne and married his widowed sister-in-law Marie Louise Gonzaga. Perhaps shortly after the election, on November 20, 1648, a relevant inscription in Latin was added to the portrait (CASIMIRVS SOC. IESV S.R.E. CARDINALIS ET POLONIE REX). Two other examples of this effigy are known, both made by different artists. One, kept at the Polish Hospice in Rome, is close to the style of Simone Cantarini, and the other, attributed to the Roman school, is at the Pinacoteca Nazionale of Ferrara (oil on canvas, 98 x 74 cm, PNFe 251). The bold brushstrokes of this painting also recall the cherubs by Galli's studio, such as the cherub sold in 2020 (sold at Cambi Casa d'Aste in Genoa, December 11, 2020, lot 332), as well as waves in the more finely painted Birth of Venus, perhaps created for a cardinal or wealthy nobleman (sold at Christie's London, July 06, 2018, lot 214). A similar portrait of the queen, attributed to a follower of Pierre Mignard (18th century French school), was sold in Neuilly-sur-Seine in 2013 (oil on canvas, 50 x 42 cm, sold at Aguttes, September 24 2013, lot 12). Her dress is black, which could indicate that it was created around 1648, when the queen was in mourning after the death of Ladislas IV. It is interesting to note that this portrait of the queen resembles the style of John Casimir's portrait in Ferrara. Both works can be compared to paintings attributed to Francesco Cairo (1607-1665), also known as Francesco del Cairo, an Italian painter active in Lombardy and Piedmont. Cairo was born and died in Milan. In 1633 he moved to Turin to work as court painter for the House of Savoy and between 1637 and 1638 he traveled to Rome. Between 1646 and 1649, he returned to Turin. Saint Christina of Bolsena by Cairo in the Palace of the Grand Dukes of Lithuania in Vilnius, generally dated between 1644 and 1648, is particularly similar.
Portrait of King Ladislaus IV Vasa (1595-1648) by workshop of Giovanni Antonio Galli, called lo Spadarino, ca. 1647, Private collection.
Portrait of Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga (1611-1667) by workshop of Giovanni Antonio Galli, called lo Spadarino, ca. 1647, Private collection.
Portrait of Prince-Cardinal John Casimir Vasa (1609-1672) by workshop of Giovanni Antonio Galli, called lo Spadarino, ca. 1647, Pontifical Gregorian University.
Portrait of Prince-Cardinal John Casimir Vasa (1609-1672) by workshop of Francesco Cairo, ca. 1648, Pinacoteca Nazionale of Ferrara.
Portrait of Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga (1611-1667) by workshop of Francesco Cairo, after 1648, Private collection.
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