Attēls:Malcolm IV of Scotland (Holyrood).jpg

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Apraksts
English: This is a bust portrait of Malcolm IV depicted within a painted oval. The figure has been turned one quarter to the right. The artist (de Wet) has portrayed the monarch with thick hair, wearing a blue mantle over a brown jacket with a large ermine collar. He has a brooch of dark jewels in an open petal form and a large drop pearl. This portrait is one of ninety-three bust-lengths commissioned to decorate the Great Gallery at Holyroodhouse, Edinburgh. It is painted by Jacob de Wet II, a Dutch artist working in Scotland from 1673. Together with eighteen full-lengths these portraits illustrate the genealogy of the royal house of Scotland from Fergus I (who ascended the throne in 330 BC) to James VII (who abdicated in 1689). De Wet’s iconographic scheme was based on well-known chronicles of Scottish history by the Renaissance humanists Hector Boece (Scotorum Historiae, 1527) and George Buchanan (Rerum Scoticarum Historia, 1582). The inscriptions on the paintings correspond with Buchanan’s list of Scottish kings: from left to right, these are the number and name of the king followed by the date of accession. The dates however are considerably muddled, by a later restorer or perhaps even the artist himself. Both real and legendary, their purpose was to proclaim the authority of the Stuarts as divinely appointed rulers of Scotland. Commissioned and paid for by the Scottish Privy Council, the series was intended to convey the power and greatness of the country’s governing body as much as that of their king. With no authentic likenesses on which to base his portraits of medieval kings, de Wet made extensive use of an earlier set by the Scottish artist George Jamesone, of which twenty-six survive in private collections. From this limited basis the resulting series appears rather repetitious. Much more important than their aesthetic merit therefore was the symbolic power of painting an extremely long royal lineage stretching more than two millennia. Buchanan, Rerum Scoticarum Historia (translation from 1751): ‘surnamed the Maiden (because he would never marry) succeeded to his Grandfather David I … A good and meek Prince. He builded the Abbey of Cowper in Angus’. Number 92 in the series. Inscribed MILCOLVMBVS.4. 1153.

Provenance

Commissioned by the Scottish Privy Council in the name of Charles II.
Datums
Avots https://www.royalcollection.org.uk/collection/search#/1/collection/403345/malcolm-iv-king-of-scotland-1153-65
Autors Jacob Jacobsz de Wet II (Haarlem 1641/2 - Amsterdam 1697)

Licence

Public domain

This work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 70 years or fewer.


Šis attēls ir publiskā lietošanā ASV teritorijā saskaņā ar ASV likumiem un normatīvajiem aktiem, jo ir pirmo reizi publicēts pirms 1929. gada 1. janvāra, vai ir publiskā lietošanā saskaņā ar citām juridiskām prasībām..

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