Details
ATTRIBUTED TO JACOB JORDAENS (ANTWERP 1593-1678)
Two head studies
oil on paper, laid down on panel
1112 x 1558 in. (29.3 x 39.6 cm.)
with inventory number '261.' (lower left) and repeated '261' (lower right)
Provenance
(Possibly) William Kerr, 3rd Earl of Lothian (1605-75), or Robert Kerr, 1st Marquess of Lothian (1636-1703).
William Kerr, 3rd Marquess of Lothian (1690-1767), by 1726, when recorded in the inventory, and by descent in the family at Newbattle Abbey and Monteviot House to,
Michael Kerr, 13th Marquess of Lothian (b.1945), by whom sold in the following,
Two Great Scottish Collections: Property from the Forbes of Pitsligo and the Marquesses of Lothian; Sotheby's, London, 28 March 2017, lot 445, as 'Circle of Sir Peter Paul Rubens'.
Literature
Newbattle Abbey inventory, c. 1726/27.
Newbattle Abbey inventory, 1752, as 'two heads ... Lucca Jordano'.
Newbattle Abbey inventory, c. 1788.
Newbattle Abbey inventory, March 1833, no. 261.
Newbattle Abbey inventory, May 1878, no. 261 (Front Stairs).
J.M. Gray, Notes on the Art Treasures at Newbattle Abbey, Mid-Lothian, Edinburgh, 1887, p. 43, as by Jacob Jordaens.
Newbattle Abbey inventory, 21 May 1900, no. 261 (Front Stairs).
Newbattle Abbey inventory, December 1901, p. 43, as by Jacob Jordaens (Staircase).
Monteviot House inventory, 14 July 1989, no. 261, as by Jacob Jordaens (Library).
Special notice
Please note this lot is the property of a consumer. See H1 of the Conditions of Sale.
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Lot Essay

Jordaens painted many such oil studies in the first half of his career, after the example of Rubens, with this practice also adopted by van Dyck. While these at times depicted individual head studies, Jordaens also combined several heads on a single support, as in the present work, which he would have kept in his studio for use in larger compositions. While it is not possible to link the present studies to any specific finished work, with the figure’s reverential upturned gaze, illuminated by a beatific light, he may have formed part of a composition of an Adoration or a Crucifixion, both as a figure seen frontally and from behind.

Brecht Vanoppen, to whom we are grateful, has examined a photograph of the painting and compares the figure’s ruddy cheeks and contouring to other studies by the young Jordaens, such as that sold in these Rooms, 6 December 2018, lot 11. While holding reservations, Vanoppen also notes the characteristic use of the paper support, which was often laid down on canvas or panel, as it is here.

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