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A Guide to
Picture Frames at Knole, Kent
This
guide was first produced on the occasion of a lecture by Jacob
Simon at Knole on 12 November 1998. Knole is one of the great
houses of England. The original 15th-century house was enlarged
and embellished by the 1st Earl of Dorset, Queen Elizabeth's
Lord High Treasurer in 1599. It has remained largely unaltered
ever since - a rare survival. For opening times see the National
Trust website, or
telephone 01732 450608.
Introduction
Knole is incomparably rich in the finest early seventeenth-century
English furniture. It is sometimes forgotten that the collection
is almost as rich in magnificent early picture frames. Some of
these frames are on pictures collected by the Earls of Dorset
but a forced sale in 1645 during the Civil War dispersed much
of the collection. Many of the pictures now at Knole were collected
by Lionel Cranfield, 1st Earl of Middlesex, Lord Treasurer to
James I and owner of Copt Hall in Essex from about 1623. His
daughter, Frances Cranfield, married the future 5th Earl of Dorset
in 1637 and it was through this marriage that Copt Hall came
into the possession of the Earls of Dorset following the death
of the 3rd Earl of Middlesex in 1674. Copt Hall became one of
the chief Dorset residences, though the 6th Earl of Dorset was
considering selling the house at least as early as 1693 to meet
his mounting debts. Finally in June 1701 the estate was sold
and the contents moved to Knole. At least six wagon loads, including
157 pictures and maps, made their way to Knole, with the great
cartoons now in the Cartoon Gallery specially rolled for the
occasion.
In the later history of the house two figures stand out as collectors
and patrons: the 6th Earl for his patronage of Sir Godfrey Kneller
and the 3rd Duke for his purchases of Old Masters and commissions
to Sir Joshua Reynolds.
Techniques and materials
The story of the picture frame in England really begins in the
16th century. The earliest frames were made of oak, which remained
popular for frame construction until the mid-17th century when
supplanted by pine. These early frames were joined at the corners
with a lap joint, with the frame sides overlapping at the corners,
but by the early 18th century, the mitre joint had become universal,
with the corners cut diagonally and joined by a key on the reverse
side of the frame.
In the 16th century frames were usually painted or stained, but
from the 17th century onwards many frames were gilt, that is
covered in gold leaf, or finished in silver and lacquered for
protection and to give the appearance of gold. The gold leaf
was attached by an oil-based adhesive ('oil gilt') or by one
which was water-based ('water gilt'). Water gilding was a more
time-consuming process and required a special preparation of
clay (the 'bole') which provided the firm, smooth foundation
necessary for the gilding to be burnished, or polished.
Elaborately carved frames were time-consuming to make. It was
cheaper to produce ornament by pressing a pliable material, such
as papier-mâché or compo, in a mould, and then setting
it on a wooden framework. Papier-mâché was first
used in this way in the 17th century. It was, however, the introduction
of compo, a composition of whiting, glue, resin and linseed oil,
which drove out the carved frame. Compo became popular in the
1790s and dominated framemaking in the 19th century. It allowed
for larger and more richly ornamented frames but its fragility
proved a drawback.
Lord Middlesex's framemakers in the 1630s
It is difficult to document early frames, and even more difficult
to link those documents with surviving frames. However in view
of the outstanding importance of the 1st Earl of Middlesex's
collection, an indication is given here of the framemakers at
work for him in the 1630s. At the time Lord Middlesex was actively
remodelling Copt Hall, with Edmund Kinsman, a master mason with
links with Inigo Jones, in charge at the beginning of the decade,
and Nicholas Stone, Kinsman's sometime partner, at the end. Stone
was a leading stone carver but for Lord Middlesex his role extended
to arranging picture framing so that in August 1639 he is to
be found contracting that Zachary Taylor, a wood carver in the
King's employ, would produce a picture frame 'of the Right Hon.ble
Lady Contes of Midellsex pictor' for £6, and that Taylor's
long-time associate, the painter Matthew Goodricke, would colour
and gild the frame for a further £6. This carved, coloured
and gilt frame, costing the great sum of £12 in all, must
have been very rich . Some three years earlier the portrait painter,
George Geldorp, a friend of Van Dyck, had charged Lord Middlesex
a grand total of £104.10s for various paintings, including
copies after Van Dyck, and for seven frames. Geldorp's frames
will have been in the most fashionable taste; those that are
billed individually cost £6 or £6.10s each and are
variously described as 'fort Riche' and 'tout doré' in
his rather idiosyncratic French.
Another document, a bill dating perhaps to the late 1630s, is
damaged and so lacks the supplier's name. It records the prices
of pictures supplied to Lord Middlesex, the most expensive item
being 'a picture of yourself and having the frame gilded', which
came to the considerable sum of £20. This bill was published
by C.J. Phillips in 1929 under his entry for Daniel Mytens but
a reference contained within it to a double portrait of Lady
Leicester and Lady Carlisle, surely a Van Dyck type, indicates
a date in the late 1630s or even the early 1640s.
What did these frames look like? During Charles I's reign elaborately
carved and gilt frames because the fashion in court circles.
By the 1630s there were two distinct tendencies at work, the
one more-or-less classical in spirit, with frames ornamented
with scrolls and volutes and with swags and festoons of flowers,
foliage and fruit, placed symmetrically about both the horizontal
and vertical central axes of the frame, the other anti-classical,
in the auricular style, symmetrical only about the vertical axis,
organic, fantastic and irregular in ornamentation, deriving its
inspiration ultimately from animal and marine forms. At Knole
the frames on nos. 1, 146, 234, 236 and 276-281 fall into the
first camp while nos. 73-75, 117, 171, 177, 178, 232, 233 and
274 clearly belong to the second. It was this latter, auricular,
style which flowered in the 1640s and 1650s, and subsequently
in the form of the Sunderland frame (see nos. 3 and 238) while
what one might call the classical or architectural tendency renewed
itself in quite different forms during the Commonwealth and at
the Restoration.
Key terms used in this guide
- auricular: literally 'of the ear',
a highly stylised free-flowing interpretation of organic forms,
usually animal or marine in nature, current from the 1630s to
the 1680s for pictures of all sizes. The style is usually found
in one of half-a-dozen set patterns, which will be described
as they occur.
- bolection:
a distinctively
shaped convex or ogee moulding of reverse section, curving
up from the picture and back to the wall, popular in the late
17th century.
- Kent: a frame type current
from the 1720s to the 1760s, named after the architect William
Kent, featuring projecting square corners, a flat frieze decorated
with sand or architectural pattern, and raised inner and outer
mouldings, the outer one carved with egg-and-dart or other architectural
motif.
- Maratta: a frame with prominent
curved top edge of distinctive profile, taking its name from
the Italian painter, Carlo Maratta, a style current in Britain
from the 1750s to the 1790s.
- reverse pattern:
a frame
with the most prominent moulding nearest to the picture of which
there are two recurring patterns at Knole, here described as
type A, with wide sloping sanded sides, leaf back edge
and 'cabochon' (akin to egg-and-dart) sight edge and type
B, rather narrower, with acanthus leaves on both the sight
edge and the back edge.
- Sansovino:
a Venetian
style named after the 16th-century architect Jacopo Sansovino,
characterised by the sculptural use of large-scale scrolls and
volutes, often with festoons of fruit, the carving partially
gilt.
The Great Hall
Stylistic terms in italics are explained above. Frames
are made of pine unless stated.
The medieval GREAT HALL was substantially altered by Thomas Sackville,
1st Earl of Dorset, who came into possession of Knole in 1603.
The elaborate Jacobean screen dates to soon after 1605. The picture
frames in this room cover a wide range of styles from the early
17th to the early 19th century and provide a key to understanding
the collections and, indeed, the changing taste in picture framing
in England over two centuries.
The earliest is the portrait hung on the panelling at the far
end of the room of Thomas Sackville, 1st
Earl of Dorset (no. 1) attributed to John de Critz and
dating to about 1601. The elaborate frame is unique and perhaps
belongs to the 1620s; it has been altered at the corners to fit
the picture. Unusually for such an intricately carved English
frame of this date, it is in pine rather than oak . In style
the paired scrolls at the centres owe something to the Sansovino
style in framing, popular in Venice, but there are other influences
at work, still to understand. As originally finished the elaborate
carvings would have been brightly gilt, standing out against
a blue background. Much of the gilding is now obscured by bronze
overpaint which also hides all but a few traces of the blue paintwork.
We shall see other early frames with rather similar paired scrolls,
some with painted backgrounds, in the Ballroom and Cartoon Gallery.
Over the door Edward Sackville, 4th Earl of Dorset
(no. 3) from the studio of Van Dyck has a fine Sunderland frame
of the 1670s or 1680s and so somewhat later than the picture.
The key hanging on the frame is said to be the Earl's key of
office as Lord Chamberlain to Charles I. The Sunderland frame,
named after one of the aristocratic collectors of the day, is
a late and fantastic development of the auricular style.
It is distinguished by its irregular sight edge, visually cutting
into the field of vision of the painting. It is also characterised
by its bewilderingly complex rich flowing carving, with shield
at top and mask at bottom. Another example can be found in the
Ballroom with carving to the same pattern. The frame is carved
out of the flat of four lengths of pine, with a narrow back frame
added for strength (just noticeable when standing to the right
of the picture).
Much less elaborate
is the narrow reverse section found on three other full-lengths:
those of the Duc d'Epernon (no. 8), the 1st
Earl of Middlesex (no. 10) and the 2nd Marquess
of Hamilton (no. 11). The main sloping surface gains
its effect from the application of sand which was subsequently
gilt.
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Fig. 1 Nicolò
Molino by Daniel Mytens, 1622, detail of a carved and gilt
reverse pattern frame in pine of type A, perhaps by Henry
Miles, 1698.
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This unusual late 17th-century or early
18th-century pattern (fig. 1), designated here as type A,
will be found again in the Leicester Gallery and the King's Room.
It is possibly to be associated with a bill of the carver and
gilder, Henry Miles, dated 12 March 1698 where 'A whole length
frame for Leegal(?) Cranfield Earl of Mid'sex' is one of four
charged at £3 each. The pattern may have continued in use
over a period of years and evidently became something of a house
style at Knole. |
In all ten early 17th-century
portraits on the visitor route have these frames, as do other
portraits in the private appartments. Reframing of this kind
suggests that at one stage the portraits may have hung in a series,
perhaps in a gallery at Knole, Copt Hall or another house. At
£3 each these simple frames were relatively inexpensive;
the almost contemporary Kneller full-length in the Ballroom cost
£10 to frame and the portrait of George IV here in the
Great Hall £45.
A Prospect of Dover Castle (no. 2) over the fireplace
was painted in 1727 by John Wootton to mark the 1st Duke of Dorset's
swearing in as Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports. The magnificent
Kent frame is ornamented at top with ducal coronet and
the Sackville leopard supporters and along the frieze on all
four sides with a distinctively shaped heraldic device (to be
found elsewhere in the room in blue and white on the Sackville
coat of arms which forms the crest of the Hall Screen). This
architectural style had only been introduced a few years earlier,
notably with William Kent's remodelling of the gallery at Kensington
Palace. The quality of the Knole frame suggests that it is the
work of a leading carver and gilder such as John Howard, the
King's framemaker, James Richards or William Waters.
At the end of the hall in the centre is a studio version of Sir
Thomas Lawrence's great full-length of George IV as Prince
Regent (no. 6), probably the portrait of the Prince for
which Charles Lord Whitworth, second husband of Arabella Cope,
Duchess of Dorset, paid Lawrence £420 in 1817, and a further
£45 for the massive frame. The frame pattern is one favoured
by the artist in the 1810s. The brilliance of the gilding is
now obscured by later bronzing, probably applied to hide damage
to the compo foliage and leaf ornament.
To either side, the portraits of George III and
Queen Caroline (nos. 5, 7) are also likely to be
Lawrence studio products but painted surprisingly enough to a
pattern pioneered by Lawrence's predecessor as Painter to the
King, Sir Joshua Reynolds. These were probably supplied to Lord
Whitworth following his appointment as Ambassador to the French
Republic in 1802. Such portraits were standard issue to ambassadors,
and came with frames made by William Adair, carver and gilder
to the King. One of the portraits, that of George III, has Adair's
label as framemaker on the back: 'Adair, Carver and Gilder To
Their Majesties'. Normally the frames were paid for by the Lord
Chamberlain but in this case a bill from Adair to Lord Whitworth
dated 9 March 1803 for £108.8s.6d, including a pair of
whole length frames, may relate to these portraits. Such portraits
served a symbolic function only hinted at by the appearance along
the top of the frame of the Scottish thistle and the English
rose. The portraits issued to ambassadors are described in the
Lord Chamberlain's Order Book as 'to be set up under the State,
as has been usual on such like occasions'. The State, or canopy
of state, beneath which the portrait of the King was hung, was
part of the apparatus of official occasions at which the ambassador,
when enthroned beneath the canopy, was in theory transmuted from
the King's representative into the King himself. The portrait
in its gilt frame would have been seen against the crimson silk
damask of the backcloth of the canopy; the frame needed to lend
magnificence to the occasion. |
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Fig. 2 Jane
Seymour after Holbein, 16th century, detail of painted and
gilded frame in oak, probably original to the picture.
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From the Brown Gallery to the Spangled
Dressing Room
On the
first floor, in the BROWN GALLERY, beginning at the far end,
the severe black oak frames of the 16th and early 17th centuries
are much in evidence including, for example, the portrait after
Holbein of Jane Seymour (no. 18) with a frame relieved
with some gilding (fig. 2). This sort of frame was once very
common, and was only gradually supplanted by the taste for carved
and gilt frames. It retains traces of the original hanging holes
at top centre, not visible to the spectator, and would originally
have been hung from a ribbon threaded through the holes. |
On
the other side of the gallery the very rare set of historical
portraits (nos. 25-68) of famous personages of the 16th century,
though still painted on oak, present a very different aspect
with their gilt frames. The core of the set may perhaps have
been formed by Lady Margaret Howard in the 1580s, according to
Alastair Laing, and then extended by her husband the 2nd Earl
of Dorset a decade or so later. Underneath the gilding, traces
of blue pigment can just be made out with the help of a glass,
suggesting that the portraits once formed part of a decorative
scheme. They were apparently hung in the Cartoon Gallery during
the seventeenth century, perhaps high up at cornice level, and
were probably only removed when the Cartoons arrived from Copt
Hall in 1701. The ribbed frames are actually nailed on to the
panels, a most unusual approach to framing. They may have been
added in the early 18th century at the time the original scheme
was dismantled. What is for certain is that the inscribed ribbons
attached to the top of each frame are much later. In May 1793
Francis Parsons, apparently a carver and gilder or a picture
restorer, charged 4 guineas a picture (for 40 portraits, rather
than 44 as present): 'For cleaning & Repairing forty old
portraits on Pannels . . . and the Frames mended and new Gilt,
with Ribbons added to each Frame and label'd with the name and
title of each portrait, and the Angle of each painted with ornaments'.
At least four of the portraits would appear to be later additions
to the series. Parsons supplied 'one New Portrait' of the Earl
of Cumberland (no. 46) at £5.5s and with it a new
frame at £1.15s. He also supplied a new frame for Queen
Elizabeth (perhaps no. 43) at 14s and did further unspecified
work over the next few years. This may have included the supply
of portraits of Henry VIII (no. 27) and Mary
I (no. 35) where the panel construction and the heavy
corner leaves of the frames single them out from earlier paintings
in the series. Other ribbed frames with similar corner leaves
can be found on a group of pictures of 16th-century reformers,
including Luther, Melancthon, Pomeranus (no. 82)
at the entrance to the gallery, and may also have been supplied
by Parsons. |
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Fig. 3 Lionel
Cranfield, 3rd Earl of Middlesex atttributed to Theodore
Russel, c. 1640, detail of reverse showing frame and panel both
in oak, the frame probably original to the picture.
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Nearby opposite the side window, the
three small portraits painted in about 1640 of the 1st Earl of
Middlesex's sons, James, 2nd Earl (no. 73), Lionel,
3rd Earl (no. 74) and Edward (no. 75),
attributed to Theodore Russel, have intriguing auricular frames
of oak, probably the originals, carved to a pattern popular from
the 1630s to the 1650s with a grimacing mask as the crowning
feature. The middle frame is gilded (the other two have later
bronze paint finishes), and the grain of the oak (fig. 3) can
just be made out through the gilding, as it can be both in the
painted panel itself in certain lights and, of course, in the
oak panelling of the actual room. Most of the other frames in
the Brown Gallery are 18th century in date. |
LADY
BETTY GERMAIN'S DRESSING ROOM is full of small richly framed
pictures, both portraits and old masters. Near the door, Lady
Betty Germain (no. 130) by Charles Philips, 1731, has
its original frame, a simple running pattern of scrolling foliage
with flat acanthus leaves at the corners. It is not easy to study
the many 16th, 17th and 18th-century portraits at a distance
so mention here is restricted to a few chosen for their frames.
On the right James Hay, 1st Earl of Carlisle (no.
117), a Van Dyck school product, has its original richly carved
oak auricular frame, of the sort already seen in the Brown
Gallery but with a highly stylised lion mask as its crowning
feature. To the left the small portrait of the young Charles
II (no. 110), after Adriaen Hanneman, is distinguished
by its contemporary frame, possibly original, an attractive reverse
section pattern fashionable in the mid-17th century, with
thistles at the corners and centres and sanded sides; larger
frames of this sort can be found in the Leicester Gallery.
Turning now to the Old Masters, several of these have fine frames
of Italian inspiration if not of Italian origin, generally carved
in poplar. Some were presumably framed by the Roman dealers James
Byres and Thomas Jenkins from whom the 3rd Duke of Dorset made
many acquisitions while on the Grand Tour in 1770 and on his
return to England. On the right Garofalo's Judith with
the Head of Holofernes (no. 126), sent by Jenkins to
the Duke in 1775, has a very finely carved frame of Maratta
section with an intricately gadrooned top edge, while The
Madonna and Child with Saints (no. 127), acquired through
Jenkins in 1770, has a simpler frame of the same type. Opposite
in the window bay the Unknown man called Raphael
(no. 99) is framed in a crisply carved neoclassical pattern with
leaf-and-berry top edge.
Returning through LADY BETTY'S BEDROOM, the overdoor after Van
Dyck, Karel van Mallery (no. 97) has a distinctive
late 17th-century reverse pattern (type B) which will
be found again on two other Van Dyck copies in the Leicester
and Cartoon Galleries.
In the SPANGLED DRESSING ROOM on the right side, the fine Sir
Peter Lely of Barbara Villiers, Duchess of Cleveland
(no. 146) has a sumptuous frame of the 1630s in the classical
style of the period with great scrolls, foliage and tied corners,
which must be the work of one of the leading framemakers of the
time (see above, Lord Middlesex's framemakers in the 1630s).
It was enlarged later, perhaps in the 1670s, by the addition
of the shield at top and mask at bottom. Originally the gilt
carving would have been seen against a blue background, a most
striking effect. Another example of this rare type can be found
in the Ballroom. However, not all mid-17th century frames were
so elaborate. To the left of the window at the top, Mary
Bagot, Countess of Dorset (no. 148) has a narrow cushion
moulding carved with overlapping leaves.
By the end of the century taste in framing had shifted to bolder
leaf and foliage patterns in the architectural styles of the
period. The two Lely studio portraits at either side at the far
end of the room, Anne Hyde, Duchess of York (no.
142), wife of the future James II, and Anna Brudenell,
Countess of Shrewsbury (no. 144) have matching bolection
frames ornamented with large 'raffle' leaves which catch the
light and provide a rich and satisfying border; they are contemporary
with the portraits but it is difficult to show that they are
the originals, knowing how easy it was to swap frames made for
portraits painted to standard sizes.
From the Leicester Gallery to the Reynolds Room
In the BILLIARD ROOM Heraclitus (no. 161) and Democritus
(no. 162), attributed to the Dutch artist Johan Morelse, have
very early papier-maché frames of mid-17th century date,
probably original to the pictures. Like other frames of this
type, the body of the frame is of pine and has no rebate; the
canvas protrudes at the back, as can be seen by standing to the
left of no. 161. The grotesque masks and foliage scrolls at the
centres and corners are made of an early form of papier-maché.
As the scientist Robert Boyle wrote in 1671, 'there are very
few that imagine [paper] is fit to be employed otherways than
about Writing, or Printing, . . . without dreaming that Frames
for Pictures and divers fine pieces of Embossed work . . . may
. . . be made of it'. The ornament was normally gilt, set on
a black ground for effect, here obscured by the later gilt sanded
finish. There is some evidence, however, still to evaluate fully,
that the background was in part originally blue, like various
other early frames at Knole. |
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Fig. 4 Diana
and Actaeon after Titian, detail of carved and gilt frame
in pine, possibly supplied by John Kneller in 1696, with the
painting removed.
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Between these two pictures hangs a much
more splendid product, the boldly carved centre-and-corner frame
(fig. 4) of Diana and Actaeon (no. 163), one a
pair of copies of celebrated works by Titian. It is tempting
to identify these frames with the 'carved and burnisht' frames
made for the two pictures by John Kneller in 1696 at a cost of
£3 each but the charge does not seem enough for frames
of this elaboration. The sight edge is rather similar to that
found on the almost contemporary frames found around the house
on various early 17th-century full-length portraits (see frames
described as type A in the Great Hall above and the Leicester
Gallery below). |
The
fine 18th-century Maratta frame on Salvator Rosa's Landscape
with Bandits (no. 170) is clearly Italian (rather than
English) for it is lap-jointed and carved in poplar; in construction
it is like the frames on some of the 3rd Duke's other old master
purchases already seen in Lady Betty Germain's Sitting Room.
The main leaf-and-tongue ornament sits in the hollow of the frame,
in contrast to the adjoining portrait of An Italian Youth
(no. 165), a pine frame where the embellishment is on the sight
edge.
In the VENETIAN AMBASSADOR'S ROOM the overmantel frame is in
the Kent style and like much of the architectural decoration
of the room may date to about 1730. To left and right of the
windows James Compton, 3rd Earl of Northampton (no.
177) and Thomas Carey (no. 178) are difficult to
see, but both these mid-17th century portraits have fine auricular
frames, conceivably original, which are variations on the 'grimacing
mask' type already seen in the Brown Gallery.
Returning to the LEICESTER GALLERY, further examples of the distinctive
late 17th-century sanded reverse pattern of type A (fig.
1), already seen in the Great Hall, can be found on Daniel Mytens's
Nicolò Molino (no. 174) and on five other
early 17th-century full-lengths (nos. 188-190, 194, 198). Notice
the finely sanded flat surface, catching the light, and the 'cabochon'
motif on the sight edge, akin to egg-and-dart, echoing that on
the Titian copies in the Billiard Room. Two other late 17th-century
reverse patterns can be seen nearby. |
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Fig. 5 Thomas
Howard, 2nd Earl of Arundel and his Countess after Van Dyck,
detail of carved and gilt reverse pattern frame in pine of type
B, late 17th or early 18th century.
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The large group portrait after Van Dyck
of Thomas Howard, 2nd Earl of Arundel and his Countess
(no. 203) has the unusual leaf pattern of type B (fig.
5) already seen in Lady Betty's Bedroom, while the Kneller school
Chief Baron Lant (no. 204) has a wide 'raffle'
leaf bolection frame notable for its fashionable silvering,
and vigorous if crude carving (note that the frame has been reduced
in size at the bottom left and top right corners. In the early
18th century these straight-sided reverse patterns went out of
fashion. A fine example of the rising taste for frames with projecting
centres and corners can be found on Charles Jervas's Joseph
Addison (no. 205), dated 1714, a frame which is probably
original to the picture. |
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the far end of the Leicester Gallery hang some of the most extraordinary
frames at Knole, indeed in any house in the country. To start
with James I (no. 200), from the studio of Daniel
Mytens. Like some of the other frames at Knole, the gilt carving
is seen against a blue background, albeit heavily restored. The
portrait dates to about 1621 and the frame, carved in oak, is
apparently original and as such a very rare survival. The putti,
foliage and architectural detail are vigorously if rather crudely
carved in exceptionally high relief; they are without close parallel
in contemporary decoration and furniture, making it difficult
to be categorical about the date of the frame. Turning to Mytens's
Lionel Cranfield, 1st Earl of Middlesex (no. 196),
dated 1620, a fine portrait of the man who owned so many of the
lavishly framed early pictures at Knole. The frame is a cruder
version of that on the portrait of James I, again in oak, but
with a red background, not necessarily original. The third frame
of this type is found on another full-length, the somewhat later
Van Dyck school portrait of Ann Brett, Countess of Middlesex
(no. 201), second wife of the 1st Earl of Middlesex. The frame
is evidently a much later copy, mechanical in detailing and carved
in pine, perhaps 19th century in date. |
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Fig. 6 Mary
Curzon, Countess of Dorset attributed to William Larkin,
1612, detail of carved and gilt frame probably dating to the
1630s.
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In the BALLROOM the earliest carved and
gilt frame (fig. 6) is that found to the right of the fireplace
on Mary Curzon, Countess of Dorset (no. 234), a
full-length portrait of the wife of the 4th Earl, attributed
to William Larkin. The frame probably dates to the 1630s and
as such is twenty years later than the picture; it is an exceptionally
rare type of carved and gilt frame of the reign of Charles I,
with paired scrolls like the 1st Earl of Dorset
(no. 1) in the Great Hall but otherwise exhibiting its own distinctive
language of swags and rosettes. |
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To the right
Frances Cranfield, Countess of Dorset (no. 236)
has a frame of the 1630s, not original to the picture, which
almost exactly matches that already seen in the Spangled Dressing
Room. Two slightly later frames in the auricular style
may be found on the full-lengths to the left of the chimney-piece,
Frances Cranfield, Countess of Dorset (no. 232),
wife of the 5th Earl, from the studio of Van Dyck, and Richard
Sackville, 3rd Earl of Dorset (no. 233), attributed to
William Larkin, again not original to the pictures (a photograph
taken in 1866 shows that the frame now on no. 233 was then on
no. 232). The frame on no. 233 is an example of another standard
mid-17th century type, albeit cut, with an eagle's head at the
top of each side as its most distinctive feature.
From the 1690s are several portraits by Sir Godfrey Kneller,
including his lovely full-length of the Sackville children, Lionel,
later 1st Duke of Dorset and his sister Mary (no. 237).
In 1695 John Norris, the King's framemaker, who worked extensively
for Lionel's father, the 6th Earl, charged £10 for this
frame, a baroque pattern of repeated bunches of boldly carved
leaves, flowers and acorns, reflecting architectural styles of
the period. The design starts at top centre, runs down the sides
of the frame and meets at bottom centre. It is found also on
Kneller's later portrait of the 1st Duke (no. 221) and that of
his wife (no. 225). Interestingly it can also be found on the
small portrait of Richard Sackville, 5th Earl of Dorset
(no. 226) but upside down, a not uncommon misunderstanding; in
this case the reversal occurred a long time ago, probably when
the Queen Anne style cresting was added.
The frames on the portraits of John Frederick Sackville,
3rd Duke of Dorset (no. 224) and his wife Arabella,
Duchess of Dorset (no. 222) are Lawrence patterns of
the early 1800s (see above, nos. 5, 7 in the Great Hall) and
were perhaps supplied by William Adair in 1803.
The REYNOLDS ROOM takes its name from Sir Joshua Reynolds who
painted most of the portraits in the room including the full-length
of the John Frederick Sackville, 3rd Duke of Dorset
(no. 255), one of the artist's great patrons. Many of Reynolds's
pictures retain their original frames, made for the Duke by Thomas
Vials, one of the leading London framemakers of the period who
had premises in Leicester Square, close to Reynolds's studio.
Vials charged 25 guineas (£26.25p) in 1770 for the richly
carved frame on the portrait of the 3rd Duke, not much compared
with Reynolds's 150 guineas for the picture, but more than two-and-a-half
times the £10 that John Norris had charged the 6th Earl,
the Duke's great-grandfather, for a frame of the same size in
1695. The cost depended on the quality of the finish and on the
number of bands of intricate carving - the gadrooning or diagonal
ribbing prominent on the top edge, the adjacent ribbon-and-stick,
the leaf-and-tongue on the sight edge and the egg-and-dart on
the back edge - but nevertheless the frame was expensive. In
the bill Vials describes it as a 'broad bold rich burnish gold
whole length frame, carved with knull and hollows, rich foliage,
leaf and stick'. In the hollow of the frame the overlap of the
sheets of brightly burnished gold leaf can be made out, as can
the red bole used as a preparation for the gold.
Wang-y-Tong (no. 249) appears as 'the Chinese picture'
in Vials's bill in 1776: 'a half length oyl gold Italian moulding
frame, 4 1/2 in. broad, carved with loose foliage and ribbons'at
a cost of £3.18s. This is a frame of Maratta profile
but with the main leaf-and-tongue ornament on the sight edge
in the Italian manner, rather than in the hollow as with many
of the other frames in the room. The oval 3rd Duke of Dorset
(no. 262), opposite Wang-y-Tong, is in a frame which would appear
to match one on a picture formerly in the collection, billed
by Vials in 1776 as a 'Carlo Maratt frame, 4 in 1/2 broad, with
an oval spandle and large patteree flowers' at a cost of 4 1/2
guineas (£4.72), more expensive because of the extra carving
involved.
The Cartoon Gallery and the King's Room
In the CARTOON GALLERY the melancholic full-length portrait of
Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey (no. 285) has a wide
flat cushion frame made for the picture and conceivably original
though the cresting and other carvings surrounding it appear
later in date. The main flat frieze of leaves and berries apparently
retains traces of blue pigmentation of the kind found on some
other early frames at Knole. The frame is unique and as such
it is difficult to place precisely. It is not even possible to
be sure about the picture; though dated 1546, the year before
Surrey's execution, both picture and frame may belong to the
early 17th-century.
The CARTOON GALLERY takes its name from the set of six large
copies of Raphael's tapestry cartoons (the originals are in the
Victoria and Albert Museum). The cartoons arrived in England
between 1623 and 1629. These copies (nos. 276-281), reputedly
painted by Francis Cleyn, are said to have been a gift from Charles
I to the 1st Earl of Middlesex. They were presumably hung in
the gallery at Copt Hall. The original black-and-gold frames
have the arms of the Earl of Middlesex at top centre, distinguished
by three golden fleur-de-lis arranged vertically; the frames
to the right of the fireplace have been somewhat cut about to
get them to fit the space, presumably when they were moved here
in 1701. The rather Italianate scrolls and volutes, containing
pomegranate and flower head decoration, can be closely matched
in a few other surviving frames of the period, such as Cornelius
Johnson's Lord Coventry of 1638 (National Portrait Gallery,
on loan to Montacute House). It is possible that the background
of the Knole frames was once white, rather than black, according
to traces detected by Tim Newbery. These frames are rare examples
of the richly carved, gilt and painted frames made for a few
sophisticated collectors in the circle of Charles I.
Other early frames of interest in this gallery are to be found
on the Van Dyck school Henry Liberti (no. 275),
a late 17th-century reverse pattern of type B and on Christian
IV of Denmark (no. 274), a rather weak example of an
auricular frame.
The KING'S ROOM houses a full-length of James I (no.
287), after Paul van Somer, in another late 17th-century reverse
pattern of type A, as well as some quite remarkable silver
mirror frames, the grandest of which is the pierglass with the
monogram FCD, for Frances Cranfield, Countess of Dorset, supplied
with the matching table and stands by the cabinet maker Gerrit
Jensen in 1680. In cost and magnificence this suite of furniture
outstrips anything else in the house.
The Knole collection deserves more attention than can be given
in the space of a short guide. If the funding can be found the
National Trust hopes to carry out a detailed programme of investigation
and curatorial research.
For fuller details of Knole's history, complete with a bibliography,
see the new 96-page guidebook by Robert Sackville-West, Knole,
Kent, 1998 (for details of ordering, e-mail reception@ntrust.org.uk). Further information
on picture frames can be found in the book by Jacob Simon, The
Art of the Picture Frame, Artists, Patrons and the Framing of
Portraits in Britain, National Portrait Gallery, 1996.
Contact address: jsimon@npg.org.uk
Acknowledgements:
This
guide owes much to the pioneering work of the late Gervase Jackson-Stops
in the Knole archive at the Kent Record Office. It is informed
by discussions at Knole with John Chesshyre, Alastair Laing,
Christine Sitwell and Peter Thuring. It also benefits from Timothy
Newbery's observations on the 17th-century frames. With thanks
also to Paul Levi for the loan of photographs, to John Coleman,
who provided the opportunity for this guide, and to everyone
at Knole.
Sources: The Sackville papers are on deposit in the Centre
for Kentish Studies in Maidstone. Geldorp's bill of about 1636
is in the National Portrait Gallery Archive. See also John Bridgeman,
History and Topographical Sketch of Knole, 1817 (for the
history of the Cartoon Gallery); C.J. Phillips, History of
the Sackville Family, 2 vols, 1929, especially p.433; K.
Garlick, 'A catalogue of the paintings . . . of Sir Thomas Lawrence',
Walpole Society, vol. 39, 1964, pp. 85-6; J. Simon, 'Allan
Ramsay and picture frames', Burlington Magazine, vol.
136, 1994, p. 452 and fig. 65 (a Knole frame not on public display);
Alastair Laing, In Trust for the Nation, 1995, pp. 22-3,
197, 232.
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