THE PROPERTY OF HIS GRACE THE DUKE OF MONTROSE LONDON 1611 - 1646 PORTRAIT OF JAMES GRAHAM, 1ST MARQUESS OF MONTROSE (1612-1650), HALF LENGTH, WEARING ARMOUR, WITH A STATUE OF MINERVA BEYOND inscribed lower left: JAMES 1st MARQS. / of MONTROSE, and further inscribed on an old label, verso: James Graham / 1st Marquis of / Monstrose, by - / Vandyke oil on canvas 81.2 by 87 cm.; 32 by 34 1/4 in.
Glasgow, Scottish Exhibition of National History, Art and industry,
1911;
Glasgow, Empire Exhibition, Scotland, 1938;
Worcester, 1951, no. 6;
London, Tate Gallery, William Dobson, 1951, no. 10;
London, National Portrait Gallery, William Dobson, 21 October 1983 - 8
January 1984, no. 14;
London, Sotheby's, English Silver Treasures from the Kremlin, 1 - 28
January 1991, no. 7.
Literature
M. Napier, Memoirs of the Marquis of Montrose, Edinburgh 1856, vol. I,
app. pp. vii-xi, vol. II, reproduced as the frontispiece;
H. Walpole, Anecdotes of Painting in England... with additions by the
Rev. James Dallaway, ed. R. N. Wornum, 3 vols, vol. II, 1862, p. 353;
G. Vertue, 'Notebooks', 6 vols., vol. I, Walpole Society, vol. XVIII,
1930, p. 123, & vol. IV, Walpole Society, vol. XXIV, p. 50;
O. Millar, William Dobson 1611-46, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery,
London 1951, p. 14;
M. Rogers, William Dobson 1611-46, exhibition catalogue, National
Portrait Gallery, London 1983, pp. 42-44, reproduced, fig. 14;
O. Millar, 'Dobson at the NPG', in The Burlington Magazine, vol. 126,
no. 970, January 1984, p. 52.
ENGRAVED
By Houbraken, in 1740, as by van Dyck
Provenance
Commissioned by the sitter, almost certainly when he was in Oxford in
1643/4;
Thence by direct descent to the present owner.
Notes
A military commander of outstanding ability and one of the most romantic
figures in seventeenth century Scottish history, the sitter was the son
of John Graham, 4th Earl of Montrose (1573-1626) and his wife Margaret
Ruthven, daughter of the 1st Earl of Gowrie (c.1545-1584). Montrose’s
parents both died when he was relatively young and he grew up first in
the house of Sir George Elphinstone of Blythswood, whilst studying at
Glasgow, and later under the guardianship of his uncle, Archibald
Napier, 1st Lord Napier. In 1627 he was enrolled at the University of
St. Andrew’s, where he was inspired by the classics, particularly
the tales of military glory recorded by ancient writers such as
Xenophon, Lucan and Caesar, and excelled at hunting, hawking, archery,
golf, and chess. Following a period of study abroad to complete his
education, including several months at the military academy at Angers in
France, he returned to Scotland in 1637 and was prominent in the signing
of the National Covenant in 1638. He led Covenanting armies during the
Bishops’ Wars in 1639, and again in 1640. However a growing
dissatisfaction with the harsh treatment of royalist nobles, and his
belief that the Covenanting movement had become more radical in its
intentions led Montrose into secret negotiations with the King. In
particular his increasingly acrimonious relationship with the head of
the movement, Archibald Campbell, Earl of Argyll (1607-1661), who he
suspected of manipulating the cause of the National Covenant in order to
usurp the power of the King in Scotland, resulted in a secret agreement
with like-minded nobles known as the Cumbernauld bond, which was signed
in August 1640. Though not overtly royalist in its intention when its
existence became know he lost any hope of influencing the covenanting
movement from within, and in 1641, when news of his secret dealings with
the King leaked out, Montrose was arrested and imprisoned in Edinburgh
Castle.
With the outbreak of civil war in England, Parliament sought military
support from the covenanters, and following a doomed attempt to rally
Scottish royalists in opposition Montrose joined the King at Oxford,
where he was appointed Lieutenant-General for Scotland and given a royal
commission to raise an army in the north. Crossing the border in secret
and meeting up with a force of Irish levies and highlanders raised by
the Earl of Antrim and led by Alaister MacDonald, between 1644 and 1645
Montrose led a startlingly successful campaign, inflicting a series of
devastating victories over parliamentarian forces in the highlands, and,
in the words of the military historian Sir John Fortescue, emerged as
‘perhaps the most brilliant natural military genius disclosed by
the Civil War’.1 In the face of huge odds, and despite vastly
superior enemy numbers, Montrose combined brilliant tactics and enormous
daring to defeat the covenanters at Tibbermoure on 1st September 1644,
and again at Aberdeen twelve days later. In 1645 he routed an army twice
the size of his own under the Duke of Argyll at Inverlochy on 2nd
February, defeated the covenanters again at Auldearn on 9th May, and
broke their army a third time at Alford on 2nd July. A month later, at
Kilsyth, in an astonishing display of military brilliance, he once again
destroyed the massed Covenanter army under General Baillie and the Duke
of Argyll, chasing their beleaguered forces all the way to the border
and leaving him in effective control of Scotland. However Montrose’s
spectacular success could not last forever and in September 1645,
massively outnumbered and caught by surprise, he was finally defeated at
Philiphaugh. Retreating to the Highlands he struggled to rebuild his
army, but with the Royalist cause perilously close to defeat in England
in the aftermath of the battle of Naseby, his efforts became
increasingly futile. In July 1646 Montrose received orders from the
King, now a captive of the Scottish Covenant army in England, to disband
his men, and in September he sailed into exile.
In exile Montrose continued his support of the Royalist cause and an
account of his deeds published in Latin in 1647 gained him a heroic
international reputation. Roused to a vengeful fury by the execution of
Charles I, in 1649, having been re-appointed Lieutenant-Governor and
Captain-General of Scotland by the exiled Charles II, he dispatched a
small force from Norway to the Orkneys, joining them with reinforcements
in March 1650. Invading Scotland he pushed south through Caithness and
Sutherland, but abandoned by his King and deserted by his army he was
defeated at Carbisdale in April, captured, and handed over to the
Covenanters. On 18th May 1650 he was led through the streets of
Edinburgh in a cart to the Mercat Cross in Parliament Square where his
body was hung, drawn and quartered. He died with dignity, finely dressed
in a scarlet cloak. His head was placed on a spike and displayed from
the Tolbooth, whilst his limbs were dispatched to Stirling, Glasgow,
Perth and Aberdeen, where they were fixed to the cities’ gates.
His dismembered body was buried in un-consecrated ground in the burgh
muir, where under cover of darkness Lady Napier had his heart removed
and the embalmed organ sent to his son and heir in the Netherlands.
A last service to the crown, Montrose’s death served as a potent
symbol of determination and loyalty until death. At the restoration of
the monarchy in 1660 his body parts were reassembled in Edinburgh and
buried in the High Kirk of St Giles in an elaborate state ceremony in
which fourteen noblemen carried the coffin. Montrose’s example
would serve as an inspiration in later ages to generations of Jacobites,
and to this day his legend is intimately bound with the lure and romance
of the highlands.
This painting was almost certainly painted in Oxford, where the royal
court had relocated following the commencement of hostilities with
Parliament, between the crucial months of August 1643 and March 1644,
whilst Montrose was there negotiating with the King for permission to
raise an army in Scotland against the Covenanters. The composition is
emblematic of the directness, individuality and personal force which
characterise Dobson’s best portraits. The figure fills the canvas,
lending a sense of immediacy and presence to the picture. In the upper
left the statue of Minerva is balanced in the upper right by his helmet,
symbolising the complementary qualities of wisdom and martial strength
appropriate to the sitter’s status as a military commander. This
use of classical statuary as an allusion to the sitter’s role in
life is a device often found in Dobson’s work from the period, and
can be seen to similar effect in his Portrait of Colonel Richard Neville
(National Portrait Gallery, London), in which a relief of Mercury
(swiftness) rousing Mars (war) can be seen behind the sitter, upper
right (see fig. 2). This classical motif similarly features in Dobson’s
Portrait of Sir Thomas Chicheley (Private Collection), which features a
statue of a bare breasted female figure, probably Venus, as well as in
his Portrait of an Unknown Naval Commander (National Maritime Museum,
Greenwich), in which a marble female figure with a globe, triangle and
dividers, symbolising Navigation or Geography, is seen behind the sitter
upper left (see fig. 1). The compositional and iconographic idea is
something that is unprecedented in the work of Dobson’s
predecessor, Sir Anthony van Dyck, and the disposition of the attributes
in this picture, as well as the general composition, resemble Titian’s
Portrait of Francesco Maria I della Rovere, Duke of Urbino (Uffizi
Gallery, Florence), of which a replica or copy may have been in the
collection of the Earl of Arundel during the artist’s lifetime
(see. fig. 3).
The first native born artist of real significance in Britain, whom his
contemporary John Aubrey called ‘the most excellent painter that
England hath yet bred’,2 little is known about Dobson’s life
or career. Believed to have received encouragement from Van Dyck before
his death in 1641, almost all the known works by this enigmatic painter
were executed at Oxford, where Dobson moved early in 1643 in search of
Royal patronage. He probably received early patronage from the Prince of
Wales and Prince Rupert, and both an etched portrait of him by Josias
English, produced circa 1650, and the title of a (now lost) poem
dedicated to him by Thomas Rawlins suggest that he was appointed
Sergeant-Painter to the King and a Groom of the Privy Chamber. The
unusual format of some of his pictures, as well as the deteriorating
quality of the materials in some of his later portraits and the fact
that only one preparatory drawing is attributed to him, are all
indications of the exigencies of working in a besieged city, at a time
of extreme national strife. His premature death, shortly after the fall
of Oxford in 1646, cut short a flourishing and highly original career.
Not until the emergence of William Hogarth, over half a century later,
would an indigenous artist of such prodigious talent emerge in England.
1. Quoted in M. Hastings, Montrose, The King’s Champion, London
1977, p. 13.
2. A. Clark (ed.), ‘Brief Lives’, chiefly of Contemporaries,
set down by John Aubrey, Oxford 1898, vol. I, p. 78.