Sir Thomas More and Family
Sir Thomas More and family is a painting that was once part of the Lenthall pictures.[1]
The picture
Sir Thomas More and Family is one of two near life-size copies by Rowland Lockey[2] of an original by Holbein that was lost in a fire in the 18th century.[3] It is dated 1593; Holbein died in 1554.[4] It is oil on canvas and measures 89.5 inches (227 cm) by 120 inches (300 cm). It was probably commissioned by More's grandson, Thomas More II, to commemorate five generations of the family. The National Portrait Gallery lists[5] the sitters as:
- Elizabeth Dauncey (née More) (1506–1564), Second daughter of Sir Thomas More.
- Cecily Heron (née More) (born 1507), Youngest daughter of Sir Thomas More.
- Anne More (née Cresacre) (1511–1577), Wife of John More, son of Sir Thomas More.
- Cresacre More (1572–1649), Great-grandson and biographer of Sir Thomas More.
- Sir John More (circa 1451–1530), Judge; father of Sir Thomas More.
- John More (1510–1547), Son of Sir Thomas More.
- John More (1557–1599?), Eldest son of Thomas More II.
- Maria More (née Scrope) (1534–1607), Wife of Thomas More II.
- Sir Thomas More (1478–1535).
- Thomas More II (1531–1606), Grandson of Sir Thomas More.
- Margaret Roper (1505–1544), Daughter of Sir Thomas More.
A cabinet miniature version of this portrait c. 1594 with different details, also likely by Lockey, is in the Victoria and Albert Museum.[6] [7] There is also a surviving drawing by Holbein which confirms the general accuracy of picture.
Two further copies of the Holbein, at Old Chelsea Town Hall (formerly one of the Petre Pictures) and Hendred House, East Hendred, may be by Lockey, but are too damaged and over-painted for any certainty to be possible.[8]
Provenance
The painting had been at Gubbins in Hertfordshire. At some time it came into the possession of the Lenthall family, but how this happened is not known, although it may have been borrowed from the More family and never returned. In the 17th century, John Aubrey viewed it at the Besselsleigh home of Sir John Lenthall,[9] but by 1727 it was at Burford Priory.[10] It was discussed in detail by John Loveday who saw it in 1736. The painting was unsold in a small sale of the Lenthall pictures in 1808 but was offered again and sold in a major sale in 1833. It was subsequently owned by Walter Strickland, CW Dormer, Sir Hugh Lane, Viscount Lee, and EJ Horniman whose widow bequeathed it to the National Portrait Gallery where it remains.[11] It was the centre piece in the exhibition, The King's Good Servant, at the National Portrait Gallery in 1977.[12]
Notes
- ↑ The English Counties Delineated, Volume 2, Thomas Moule, 1837
- ↑ Cooper, Tarnya (2008). A Guide to Tudor & Jacobean Portraits. National Portrait Gallery. p. 38.
- ↑ UK and Ireland Genealogy
- ↑ A biographical and critical dictionary of painters and engravers, Michael Bryan, page 337
- ↑ NPG catalogue entry
- ↑
- Strong, Roy (1969). The English Icon: Elizabethan and Jacobean Portraiture, London, Routledge & Kegan Paul p. 255.
- ↑ V&A Museum
- ↑ Lewis, Lesley (1998). The Thomas More Family Group Portraits After Holbein. Gracewing, Fowler Wright Books. p. 9. ISBN 0852444664.
- ↑ Hearn, Thomas; Aubrey, John (1813). Letters Written by Eminent Persons in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries: to which are Added, Hearne's Journeys to Reading, and to Whaddon Hall, the Seat of Browne Willis, Esq., and Lives of Eminent Men, by John Aubrey, Esq. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown. p. 464.
- ↑ Tudor and Jacobean Portraits, Roy Strong, HMSO, 1969
- ↑ Lewis, 1998, p.32
- ↑ Lewis, 1998, p.32