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Mary, Queen of Scots
From 18 August 2006
Tudor Galleries

Mary, Queen of Scots (1542-87)
by an unknown artist
(circa 1560-1565)
© National Portrait Gallery, London
Dr Tarnya Cooper, Curator of
16th Century Paintings, National Portrait Gallery, London, says:
"This is an exciting find.
The new research on this picture indicates that it was probably
painted either in her lifetime or very shortly after her death.
This is significant because the vast majority of painted portraits
of Mary, Queen of Scots that survive were either painted in the
Jacobean period, when her son James I came to the English throne,
or are later imaginary portraits. The picture has not been on
display for a long time because it was thought to be a much later
copy, so it very satisfying to find out that the picture is far
more important that we previously thought, and can put it on
public display."
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'A small portrait of Mary, Queen
of Scots, long considered to date from the eighteenth century,
has now been discovered to be an image painted within her lifetime
or possibly very shortly after her death. Recent tree ring analysis
(known as dendrochronology) has established that the panel, which
belongs to the National Portrait Gallery, was felled in the 16th
century and the work can now be dated to the period 1560 -1592.
Recent conservation work by the Gallery has also revealed an
original oval background with a marbling effect, which had previously
been over painted with dark brown paint. The portrait, purchased
by the Gallery in 1916, is a version of a known type, which also
exists in a miniature of around the same date.
The newly conserved portrait
may have been painted as an image for one of Mary's supporters
either as a symbol of loyalty during her incarceration or as
an icon of Catholic martyrdom after death. But why the portrait
was overpainted is something of a mystery. There does not seem
to be any damage to the surface below and the repaint would have
obscured Mary's name, but it is possible it may have been repainted,
in the late 18th century or early 19th century, to fit in with
a set of other images of European kings and queens.
The portrait depicts Mary following
her return to Scotland after her husband, King Francis II of
France, died in 1560. This was a period that saw her marriage
to Lord Darnley and the birth of her only child, later James
I of England/James VI of Scotland. Following Darnley's murder
in 1567 and her hasty marriage to the leading suspect, the Earl
of Bothwell, Mary was forced to abdicate and escaped to England
only to be imprisoned for the remaining 19 years of her life.
As the cousin and heir to Elizabeth I, she became the focus for
Catholic rebellion and represented a continual threat to the
future of Protestant England. After years of plots and intrigue,
she was declared guilty of treason and executed on 8 February
1587.
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