WINTERHALTER, Franz Xaver - b. 1805 Menzenschwand, d. 1873 Frankfurt - WGA

WINTERHALTER, Franz Xaver

(b. 1805 Menzenschwand, d. 1873 Frankfurt)

German painter, the most successful court portraitist of his period. He was based in Paris for most of his career, but he painted most of Europe’s royalty and was a particular favourite of Queen Victoria, who called him ‘excellent, delightful Winterhalter’ (the royal collection has more than a hundred of his paintings). His style was romantic, glossy, and superficial and his portraits have until recently generally been valued more as historical records than as works of art. However, a major exhibition of his work at the National Portrait Gallery, London, and the Petit Palais, Paris, in 1987 brought him into the limelight again. Winterhalter was also an accomplished lithographer. His brother Hermann (1808-91) was his assistant. A watercolour by him, A Girl of Frascati (signed but until recently given to his brother), is in the Wallace Collection, London.

Count Jenison-Walworth
Count Jenison-Walworth by

Count Jenison-Walworth

Portrait of Anna Berthier, Countess of Plaisance
Portrait of Anna Berthier, Countess of Plaisance by

Portrait of Anna Berthier, Countess of Plaisance

Marie-Anne-Wilhelmine-Alexandrine-Elisabeth Berthier (1816-1878), called Anna was the last of the three children of Marshal Louis-Alexandre Berthier (1753-1816), the first of Napoleon’s marshals. She was the wife of Jules Lebrun, Count of Plaisance (1811-1872). Anna was known for her beauty and elegance.

The painting is signed and dated middle left: F. Winterhalter 1838; and titled upper left: ANNA BERTHIER, COMTESSE DE PLAISANCE.

Portrait of Anna Berthier, Countess of Plaisance (detail)
Portrait of Anna Berthier, Countess of Plaisance (detail) by

Portrait of Anna Berthier, Countess of Plaisance (detail)

The painting is signed and dated middle left: F. Winterhalter 1838; and titled upper left: ANNA BERTHIER, COMTESSE DE PLAISANCE.

Portrait of Empress Alexandra Feodorovna
Portrait of Empress Alexandra Feodorovna by

Portrait of Empress Alexandra Feodorovna

Alexandra Feodorovna, born Princess Charlotte of Prussia, (1798-1860) was Empress consort of Russia. She was the wife of Tsar Nicholas I, and mother of Tsar Alexander II.

Portrait of Empress Maria Alexandrovna
Portrait of Empress Maria Alexandrovna by

Portrait of Empress Maria Alexandrovna

Marie of Hesse (1824-1880) was a princess of the Grand Duchy of Hesse and, as Maria Alexandrovna, Empress consort of Alexander II of Russia. He was the mother of Alexander III.

Portrait of Princess Clementine of Orléans
Portrait of Princess Clementine of Orléans by

Portrait of Princess Clementine of Orléans

Princess Clementine (1817-1907) was the daughter of King Louis-Philippe of France. The King commissioned a portrait of himself, his son, daughter and daughter-in-law, and this portrait became the model for numerous replicas and versions. The portraits were exhibited at the Salon of 1839.

Winterhalter was soon the preferred portraitist of many of Europe’s sovereigns, painting several portraits of the King of the Belgians and his children, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert and their children, Duke Alexander of Wurttemberg, the Grand Duchess of Mecklemburg, Princess Augusta of Prussia, the Queen of the Netherlands, Emperor Napoleon III and Empress Eugenie, and members of the Prussian and Russian royal families.

Portrait of Princesse Murat
Portrait of Princesse Murat by

Portrait of Princesse Murat

The sitter of this signed and dated portrait is Malcy-Louise-Caroline-Fr�d�rique Berthier de Wagram (1832-1884), a grand-daughter of Marshal Berthier (1753-1815), a distinguished military figure who was Chief of Staff and Major General of Napoleon’s army from 1802 to 1814. In 1854 she married Prince Joachim-Joseph-Napoleon Murat, a grandson of Joachim Murat, another of Napoleon’s great marshals who reigned as King of Naples from 1808 to 1814. The union united two of the grandest Napoleonic families at the beginning of the Second Empire.

The First of May 1851
The First of May 1851 by

The First of May 1851

Although Queen Victoria appointed British artists to the post of Principal Painter, the efforts of Sir David Wilkie, Sir George Hayter and James Sant were supplemented by the work of certain European painters brought to the queen’s attention. Such was the case with Winterhalter, who was born in Germany, but had an extremely successful career as a fashionable portrait painter based at the leading European courts. He was essentially a peripatetic artist of a truly international status who, with the help of studio assistants, had by the end of his life amassed a considerable financial fortune. First recommended to Queen Victoria by Louise, Queen of the Belgians, Winterhalter came to England in 1842 and subsequently worked regularly for the queen and her family over the next two decades. Queen Victoria had a very high opinion of Winterhalter, admiring particularly his ability to capture a likeness and his fresh, invigorating colour. In addition, the painters dexterous brushwork and high finish were also praised, although doubts were quite rightly expressed about the accuracy of his drawing. Together with Landseer, Winterhalter provides a vivid record of Queen Victoria’s court and he was responsible for many of the more important and lasting images of the queen and the Prince Consort. His achievement is in many respects comparable with Van Dyck’s images of the early Stuart court.

The First of May 1851 is a cryptic title for a painting that shows the aged Duke of Wellington presenting a casket to his one-year-old godson, Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught, who is supported by Queen Victoria. Behind these figures and forming the apex of a pyramidal composition is Prince Albert, half looking over his shoulder towards the Crystal Palace in the left background. Both the Duke of Wellington and Prince Albert are dressed in the uniform of Field Marshal and wear the Order of the Garter. In addition, Prince Albert wears the badge of the Golden Fleece. The painting derives its title from the fact that both the Duke of Wellington and Prince Arthur were born on 1 May, which was also the date of the inauguration of the Great Exhibition in Hyde Park. The Crystal Palace was the principal building in the Great Exhibition to which Prince Albert made such an important contribution. Queen Victoria recorded in her Journal that on 1 May 1851 the Duke of Wellington in fact gave a gold cup to Prince Arthur, as opposed to a casket, and received from him, as depicted here, a nosegay.

The painting was commissioned by Queen Victoria, but Winterhalter clearly encountered some difficulties in devising an appropriate composition. In the queen’s words, he ‘did not seem to know how to carry it out’ and it was Prince Albert ‘with his wonderful knowledge and taste’ who gave Winterhalter the idea of using a casket. As regards the composition, and to a certain extent the iconography, the painting resembles an Adoration of the Magi, and, indeed, is not unlike works of that subject by sixteenth-century Italian painters such as Paolo Veronese.

Prince Arthur (1850-1942) was Queen Victoria’s third son. As befitted a godson of the Duke of Wellington, he pursued an active military career, distinguishing himself during the Egyptian campaign of 1882, and was promoted to the rank of Field Marshal in 1902. Subsequently he was made Governor-General of Canada (1911) and retired from public life in 1928.

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