Paulus Pontius (aka Paulus du
Pont) (1603–1658)
“Emanuel Frockas” (aka “Portrait of
Emanuel Frockas, Duke of Ferra”; “Emanuel Frockas Perera et Pimentel comes
Feria”), 1630–1640, after Anthony van Dyck (aka Anton van Dyck; Anthony
van Dijck; Anthoni van Dijck; Antoon van Dijk) (1599–1641) from the series, “Icones
Principum Virorum” (aka “Iconographie ou vies des hommes illustres du XVII.
siècle ... les portraits peints par le fameux Antoine Van Dyck”), first published by Maarten van den Enden (1605–1673)
in Antwerp. This is an impression from the final state published either in Antwerp
in the Hendrik Verdussen (1653-1721) and Cornelis Verdussen (1661-1728)
edition of 1720, or in 1759 by Arkstée & Merkus (fl.1750–1759) in Amsterdam and Leipzig (see BM no.
1935,1213.1.24).
The Curator of the British Museum advises:
“The copper-plate is kept in the
Chalcographie, Musée du Louvre, inv.no.2392.
The portrait is based on Van Dyck's
grisaille, now kept in the collection of the Duke of Buccleuch, Boughton House,
Northamptonshire, see S. Barnes, N. de Poorter, O. Millar and H. Vey, 'Van
Dyck: A Complete Catalogue of the Paintings', Yale & London, 2004,
cat.no.III.151. See also a drawing in chalk of the sitter's head and hints of
the upper body in civilian dress, now in the collection of the Duke and Duchess
of Devonshire, Chatsworth House (Vey 261).” (BM no. 1848,1125.175)
Engraving with etching on laid paper
backed with a support sheet.
Size: (sheet) 37.3 x 24.8 cm; (plate)
24.5 x 16.8 cm; (image borderline) 22 x 16.4 cm.
Lettered below the image borderline:
(left corner) “P. Pontius Sulp.”; (left of centre) “Ant. Van Dyck pinxit”;
(centre in five lines of Latin) “NOBILISSIMVS
VIR AC D. EMANVEL FROCKAS PERERA / ... /... / …/ CVBICVLARIVS ETC”; (right) “Cum
priuilegio”.
State viii (of viii) with initials of publisher
Gillis Hendricx. “G. H.”, burnished.
New Hollstein (Dutch & Flemish)
20.VIII (Van Dyck vol I); Hollstein 77.VII (Pontius)
The British Museum offers the following
description of this print (in state v):
“Portrait of Emanuel Frockas, Count of
Feria, half-length in front of a swagged curtain to the left, a cloudy sky to
the right, directed to right and wearing armour, holding a baton in his left
hand”
Condition: near faultless impression with
generous margins (as published?) in excellent condition backed with a
conservator’s support sheet of fine archival/millennium quality washi paper. There
is a collector’s ink stamp (verso).
I am selling this superb engraving in museum-quality
condition, this is a part of one of the greatest—or at least the most
historically significant—series of portraits ever created, for the total cost
of AU$240 (currently US$168.04/EUR148.18/GBP131.96) including postage and
handling to anywhere in the world (but not, of course, any import duties/taxes
imposed by some countries).
If you are interested in purchasing this
exceptionally fine portrait, showcasing how different treatments of line can
differentiate the surface attributes of shiny metal amour from a softly draped curtain
and the delicate translucence of Count of Feria’s skin, please contact me
(oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make
the payment easy.
This print has been sold
For those wondering about the
significance of the armour and the baton held by Emanuel Frockas, Carl Depauw (1999)
in “Anthony van Dyck as Printmaker” advises that portraits in the series (Icones
Principum Virorum) of sitters who are in the category of “princes, politicians
and soldiers”—sixteen in total—“are almost all depicted wearing armour and
equipped with a baton” (p. 75).
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