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Notes
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We don't know the sitter’s identity but he was clearly a wealthy man. His belt has gold ornaments and his sword too is golden. He wears gold rings on his fingers – one set with a shield, quartered in red and blue – and another hangs from a chain around his neck. In the mid-sixteenth century it was relatively common for people to wear rings on necklaces, possibly as pledges of affection.
The pose – one hand on the hip and the other grasping the hilt of a sword – seems to have been taken from portraits painted at the Habsburg courts in the 1540s.
Title
Portrait of a Man
Date
possibly 1552
Medium
Oil on oak
Measurements
H 36.2 x W 29.2 cm
Accession number
NG1042
Acquisition method
Bought, 1878
Work type
Painting