
Christian Friedrich Zincke
To view all current artworks for sale visit philipmould.com
The portrait slightly postdates Zincke’s appointment as Cabinet Painter to Frederick Prince of Wales (1732) and would have been made when Zincke was approaching the height of his powers as an enamellist. His dominance of the market for portrait enamels was secured when his master, Charles Boit, was forced to flee England to avoid imprisonment for debt in 1714. By the 1720s, Zincke was busy working for the Royal family, his affable nature thawing even George II’s aversion to portraiture. The king also admired Zincke’s remarkable craftsmanship, commenting that his portraits were both ‘beautiful and like’.
At the time this portrait was executed, Zincke was busy with court sittings, having completed a set of family portraits for George II and Queen Caroline. This set of enamel portraits, now part of the Royal Collection, include likenesses of the King and Queen, Princesses Mary, Amelia, Anne and Caroline and even William IV, Prince of Orange who married Princess Anne in 1734. Zincke had a relatively short career as his eyesight deteriorated rapidly in the 1740s and was forced to retire, making this portrait, by its date, one of his final enamels.
The present work was part of the collection sold in 1915 from Frognal House at Chislehurst in Kent. It possibly portrays Thomas Townshend (1701-1780), an MP who sat in the House of Commons for 52 years. Frognal House was purchased by Thomas in 1752 and became the residence of his son, Thomas Townshend, 1st Viscount Sydney, after whom Sydney, Australia was named.
Provenance
Knight, Frank & Rutley, Sydney Collection, 19 July 1915 ((By the] Executors of the late hon. Robert Marsham Townshend ; The Sydney collection ; The general contents of the mansion at Frognal, Chislehurst, Kent ), lot 434;Private Collection, Switzerland
- Tumblr
-
Jean André RouquetA young Lady, wearing pale pink dress, flowers at her corsage and in her curled hair, c. 1740
-
Richard CoswayA Gentleman called C. Purling, wearing brown coat, white stock and powdered hair en queue, c. 1795
-
Nathaniel Hone the ElderA portrait enamel of a Lady, traditionally thought to be Mary Boyle, Countess of Cork and Orrery (1746–1840), wearing pink dress with lace collar and black bow held with double row of pearls, further pearls decorate her upswept hair, c. 1760
-
Jean André RouquetPortrait enamel of a Gentleman, wearing brown coat over white waistcoat embroidered with gold thread, powdered wig, c. 1740
This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to help make it more useful to you. Please contact us to find out more about our Cookie Policy.