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Description: | Acquisition: gift from Montague Bertie, second Earl of Abingdon, 1700 Description: Whole length, standing slightly to right; long dark wig; lace cravat; peers' robes: crimson velvet mantle lined with white silk and edged with miniver; deep ermine cape with three rows of sealskin spots over the same coloured velvet coat lined with miniver; black stockings and buckled shoes; sword-belt and sword; his right hand holds up a fold of his cloak, his left rests, the knuckles down, on a marble-topped gilt table on which lies his coronet; marble column in background to left; dark blue velvet curtain behind to right. The portrait commemorates Bertie's creation in 1681 as Earl of Abingdon, and was painted sometime between 1682 when Dahl arrived in England, and Lord Bertie's death in 1699. It was given to the University in 1700 by the sitter's son, Montague Bertie, 2nd Earl of Abingdon, when it was itemized in the Vice-Chancellor's accounts: 'Item for the Carriage and frame of the Earle of Abington's picture £01:02:00' (Comptus Vice Can 1697-1735, 1 Oct 1700-5 Sept 1701, Expensae Extraordinariae, Oxford University Archives, Wpbeta/22/2). In his list of portraits in the Bodleian Library compiled between 1742 and 1752, George Vertue included 'The late Earl of Abingdon by Dahl'. (G. Vertue, Note Books V Walpole Society 26 (1938), p.17) On a visit to the Bodleian Library Gallery in 1874, George Scharf, then Keeper of the National Portrait Gallery, noted of this portrait: 'M Dahl ... Extremely well painted very mellow & simple' (G. Scharf, 'Trustee Sketchbooks, Oxon II, p.15, 31 July 1874, National Portrait Gallery Archive, London) A copy is in Oxford Town Hall (Lane Poole, 1, p.248, no.748). External Link: Oxford Portraits website | Source: | Vads | Creator: | Artist: by Michael Dahl | Identifier: | http://www.vads.ac.uk/large.php?uid=873... | Go to resource |
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