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Léal Souvenir, oil on oak, 33.3 cm × 18.9 cm. National Gallery, London

Léal Souvenir (or Timotheus or Portrait of a Man) is a small 1432 oil on oak panel portrait by the Early Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck. The sitter has not been identified, but his individualistic features suggest a historical person rather than the hypothetical ideal usual in contemporary northern Renaissance portraiture. The painting is regarded for the contradiction between the man's unassuming appearance and sophisticated expression. His features have been described as "plain and rustic", but he is presented as thoughtful and inward-looking. A number of art historians have detected mournfulness in his expression, perhaps as art historian Erwin Panofsky suggests, he suffers from "loneliness". The panel was acquired in 1857 by the National Gallery, London, where it is on permanent display.

The parapet contains three layers of painted inscriptions, each rendered in an illusionistic manner to give the impression that they are chiseled onto stone. Van Eyck did not have full command of either classical Greek or Latin, and made errors, so readings by modern scholars are divided. The first inscription is in a form of Greek and seems to spell "TγΜ.ωΘΕΟC", which has not been satisfactorily interpreted but has inspired some to title the work Timotheus. The middle lettering is in French, reads "Leal Souvenir" (Loyal Memory) and indicates that the portrait is commemorative, completed after the man's death. The third records van Eyck's signature and the date of execution in somewhat legalese wording, prompting some to think the man was involved in that profession.

The man was significant enough a member of Duke of Burgundy prince Philip the Good's circle that his court painter would have portrayed him and aligned him with a figure from antiquity. The 19th-century art historian Hippolyte Fierens Gevaert identified the lettering "TγΜ.ωΘΕΟC" with the Greek musician Timotheus of Miletus. Panofsky drew the same conclusion, eliminating other Greeks bearing the name Timothy; they were of religious or military background, professions that do not match the dress of the sitter. Panofsky believed the man was probably a highly-placed musician in Philip's court. More recent research focuses on the apparent legalese of the inscriptions, and favours the idea that the man was a legal adviser to the crown, perhaps even to van Eyck himself.

Description

Léal Souvenir is one of the earliest surviving examples of secular portraiture in medieval European art and one of the earliest extant unidealised representations. This is apparent in its realism and acute observation of the details of the man's everyday appearance. Van Eyck worked in the early Renaissance tradition, and pioneered the manipulation of oil paint. Oil allows smooth translucent surfaces, and could be applied across a range of thicknesses. It could be manipulated while wet, allowing far more subtle detail than available to previous generations of painters.

Portrait

The man is framed within an undefined narrow space and set against a flat black background. Typically for van Eyck, the head is large in relation to the torso. He is dressed in typically Burgundian fashion, with a red robe and a green wool chaperon with a bourrelet and cornette hanging forward. The headdress is trimmed with fur, fastened with two buttons, and extends to the parapet. His right hand might be holding the end of the cornette. Neither the shape of his head nor his facial features correspond to contemporary standard types, let alone canons of ideal beauty. The sitter appears to be bald, although there are some faint traces of fair hair, leading Erwin Panofsky to conclude that his "countenance is as 'Nordic' as his dress is Burgundian." He has neither eyebrows nor stubble, while it is believed the eyelashes were added by a 19th-century restorer. Van Eyck's cool observation of the man's narrow shoulders, pursed lips and thin eyebrows extends to detailing the moisture on his blue eyes. He holds a scroll that might be a legal document, letter or pamphlet. In his early portraits, van Eyck's sitters are often shown holding objects indicative of their profession. The scroll contains six lines of illegible writing, which looks in form to be Latin, but may be vernacular.

Copy of Rogier van der Weyden, Portrait of Philip the Good, c. 1445. Here Philip is captured in a similar pose, holding a scroll. Like van Eyck's work, the scroll is inscribed on the outside with fictive writing/inscriptions.

Light falls from the left, leaving traces of shadow on the side of his face, a device commonly found in van Eyck's early portraits. The man is youthful, his face has a soft fleshiness achieved through shallow curves and flowing harmonious brushstrokes giving the appearance of a relaxed, warm and open personality, which Meiss describes as evoking an almost "Rembrandtesque warmth and sympathy." The man is not handsome; he has a flattish face, stubby yet pointed nose and cheekbones that might, according to Panofsky, belong to a "Flemish peasant." Dhanens describes him as having a "snub" nose, "prominent" cheek bones, and an honest expression.

Portrait of Baudouin de Lannoy, c.1435. Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Gemaldegalerie, Berlin. Van Eyck's early portraits typically show the sitter holding an emblem of his profession and class. In this stern portrait, de Lannoy, governor of Lille and a Knight of the Golden Fleece, holds a baton.

A number of art historians have noted the apparent contradictions in the man's facial features and enigmatic expression. Meiss describes him as "plain and rustic", and finds resemblance between the man's generic face and a number of figures in the lower portions of the "Adoration of the Lamb" panel in the Ghent Altarpiece. He concedes to Panofsky's view, observing a "thoughtfulness on the high, wrinkled forehead, visionary force in the dreamy yet steady eyes, a formidable strength of passion in the wide, firm mouth." According to Panofsky, the man's face is not that of an intellectual, yet he detects a pensive and lonely nature, "the face of one who feels and produces rather than observes and dissects."

Unlike van Eyck's contemporary Rogier van der Weyden, who pays especially close attention to detail in the rendering of his model's fingers, to van Eyck hands were often something of an afterthought. Here the hands are generically drawn; they may have been a later addition by van Eyck or his workshop; they are similar to those of the sitter in his c. 1435 Portrait of Baudouin de Lannoy. From the document prominently held in his hands, the sitter may have been a legal professional, or less likely, the portrait was emblematic of a specific legal deed. In either case, although he is not grandly dressed and is probably a member of the middle class, he must have been active in Philip's court, given that at the time in the Burgundian lands, portraits only rarely depicted non-nobles.

Parapat

Tombstone of the soldier Tiberius Julius Pancuius

The parapet simulates marked or scarred stone. The decay allows van Eyck to display his skill at mimicking stone chiseling. The construct evidences the influence of classical Roman funerary art, particularly stone memorials. The parapet serves a number of functions; mostly it provides a sense of gravitas; the illusion of chips and cracks conveying a sense of the venerable, or according to art historian Elisabeth Dhanens, a sense of the "fragility of life or of memory itself".

Both Otto Pächt and Millard Meiss note that the man's torso is undersized compared to his head, and that the parapet dominates the portrait, and given that the work is only the second of van Eyck's known portraits, speculate if this is due to inexperience and poor design. Meiss wonders if he didn't "lose control of design as a whole by indulging his astounding virtuosity." The panel's ground is made from chalk. Infrared photography shows traces of short vertical hatching, and underdrawings of the face, arms and hands, which were repositioned in the final painting – originally the fingers were shorter, his right thumb was raised and the parapet was lower. Analysis of the pigment shows that the flesh of his face is painted with whites and vermilion, and traced with greys, blacks, blues and some ultramarines over a red-lake glaze.

Inscriptions

Detail showing the three levels of inscriptions

The parapet has three horizontal layers of inscription, with smaller lettering on the top and lower levels that is often not visible in reproductions. In places the Greek characters are unclear, and have been widely speculated on by art historians, not least due to van Eyck's sometimes erratic spelling and unusual spacings.

Panofsky notes that many of the errors apparent in the work can be found in in Byzantine script, which most likely was his source, and in instances there are no definitive formations of characters for some of the constructs he appears to be use.

The top lettering is in chalk white, and contains the Greek script "TγΜ.ωΘΕΟC", however the last character is deliberatly concealed by a chip in the imitation stone, a device described by Panofsky as a "terminal flourish". This makes it difficult to discern, with a general consensus among art historians that it is a square C or sigma sign. Cambell cautions that the fact that the inscription is in Greek indicates that it's meaning was probably intended "to be obscure", and that there may be a significant reason why the final character is partially illegiable. He cautions that it would be "rash to attempt to supply the missing verb".

Detail showing the uppermost layer of inscription. Note the puncuation after the third character, and that the final is deliberately obscured

"TγΜ.ωΘΕΟC" was interpreted in 1857 by Charles Eastlake as "Timotheos", a proper name. However, if this was the intended meaning, more correct lettering would have read "TIM.OΘEOC", with differences in both the second and fourth characters. This may be due to spelling errors, or a misreading of the intended meaning by Eastlake.

The letters after the punctuation are generally accepted as representing 'THEOS', the Greek word for God. Art historian Lorne Campbell points out that van Eyck "appears to have employed the Greek alphabet systematically", and always employed the square sigma C for the Latin "S", and a majuscule omega ω (in the uncial form) for the Latin "O". The "o" before the lettering probably indicates the past tense; put together the inscription may read "Timotheus, Then God". or "Timotheus, Fear God", which perhaps was the sitter's motto.

The much larger middle inscription is written in French, using a 12th-century script. It reads "LEAL SOVVENIR" (Loyal Remembrance, or Faithful Souvenir), and is painted to give the impression that it was carved into the parapet.

From the first two inscriptions the panel is generally accepted as a posthumous portrait. Art historian Susan Jones notes that Roman tombstones often showed a representation of the deceased behind a parapet with a carved inscription, and that van Eyck may have known of these from travels to France. The lower inscription reads "Actu ano dni.1432.10.die ocobris.a.ioh de Eyck" (These are done in the year of our Lord 1432 on the 10th day of October by Jan van Eyck). Campbell observes that the phrasing of this extended signature is surprisingly reminiscent of legalese, and that van Eyck seems to be reinforcing that the man was a legal professional. Jacques Paviot notes that it is written in the Gothic cursive script Bastarda, at the time favoured by the legal trade.

Identity of the sitter

Composers Guillaume Dufay (left) and Gilles Binchois (right), pictured in Martin le Franc's Champion des Dames

Eastlake's translation of "Timotheos" is generally accepted as representative of a proper name. The possibility of it being a variant of "Timothy" has been discounted, as that word was not used in Northern Europe before the Reformation. There is no Germanic name which might, given the lettering in which it inscribed, imply a humanistic imitation of a Greek word. As such, art historians have sought to identify the man from Greek history or legend. Although some have advanced Athenian and Syrian generals, these have been discounted as the sitter is not wearing military clothing. Saint Timothy, first Bishop of Ephesus and associate of Saint Paul, has been suggested but eliminated as he is not dressed as a high cleric.

In 1927, Hippolyte Fierens Gevaert put forward Timotheus of Miletus, a Greek musician and dithyrambic poet born c. 446. Gevaert held that the portrait was a commemoration of a court artist who had recently died, and that the classical reference was intended to flatter his memory. Panofsky largely went with this position in 1949. He speculated that the sitter was the celebrated musician Gilles Binchois, in 1430 a canon at St. Donatian's Cathedral, Bruges. Campbell is skeptical, disclaiming that the sitter "is not dressed as a cleric".

Other theories include that the man was a Greek or Lucchese merchant, Henry the Navigator, Jean de Croÿ, or, less likely, that it is a self-portrait. Though much disagreement exists, it is probable that he was a native French speaker, and a notary, poet or member of the Compagnie du Chapel Vert (Society of the Green Hat) at Tournai.

Condition

The panel consists of a single 8mm vertically cut oak board, cut down close to the painted surface. It has a small unpainted area at the upper left. The support's encasing was probably changed in the 19th century; today four of the eight supports are fixed to the edges of the interior borders, forming inner mouldings. The other four act as inner pins. The varnish is severely degraded, with key areas of paint and ground either removed or overpainted. Infrared photography of the reverse reveals underdrawings, but they do not give any hint as to the identity of the sitter. Its ground is mostly chalk based, the pigments are predominately blacks, red lake and blues. The final portrait differs in many ways from the underdrawing — the fingers are shorter, his right arm once extended over a larger area. In the final portrait the ear is elevated, and the scroll occupies a larger pictorial space.

It is not particularly well preserved. There are yellowish layers of glaze over the face, probably later additions. The varnishes have degraded and lost their original colors. The panel has undergone a number of detrimental retouchings. In instances these have altered the sitter's appearance, most especially the removal of strands of fair hair below the hennin. It has sustained structural damage, especially to the marble on the reverse. The National Gallery repaired some "slight injuries" when it came into their possession in 1857. Campbell notes a number of efforts by later restorers were imperfect and "rather disfiguring", including work on the man's nostrils, eyelashes and the tip of his nose. There is a yellowish glaze over the eyes that seems to be either damage or overpaint. The panel overall is discoloured and suffers from aged and degenerated varnishes which make the original pigments hard to discern.

Provenance

Petrus Christus, Portrait of a Carthusian, 1446. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

The painting was widely copied through the 15th century. Near exact reproductions in copper are in Bergamo and Turin. Petrus Christus borrowed the illusionistic carving on the parapet for his 1446 Portrait of a Carthusian. A c. 1449–50 portrait of Marco Barbarigo attributed to a follower of van Eyck is heavily indebted, in that it is also unusually tall and narrow, with a large space above the sitter's head.

Portrait of Marco Barbarigo, c. 1449–50. National Gallery, London

The painting is first recorded in National Gallery collector and later director Charles Eastlake's notes from 1857. At the time he noted "slight injuries" to the canvas. Like many of van Eyck's works, and those of the Early Netherlandish painters in general, the painting's provenance is murky before the 19th century. The two near-contemporary copies were recorded that year in Bergamo and Turin when the National Gallery was verifying attribution. The first, an exact replica or original on copper, was found by Eastlake in the collection of the Lochis family of Bergamo in Italy. A second copy was located in Turin, belonging to a Count Castellane Harrach, also on copper and described as smaller than the original, and "very weak". Both are now lost.

Ink markings on the reverse show a crosslet which may record a merchant's mark or emblem. Although it is incomplete and no identification has been made, W. H. J. Weale detected the mark of "an early Italian, probably Venetian owner". An early provenance in Italy would not imply that the man came from that country; van Eyck's works were often purchased by collectors from that region. The panel was in the possession of the Scottish landscape painter Karl Ross (1816–58) before 1854. It was acquired by the National Gallery in 1857.

References

Notes

  1. The painting is usually titled Léal Suuvenir, although the inscription after which it is named does not contain a diacritic
  2. ^ Smith, 42
  3. "Portrait of a Man ('Léal Souvenir')". National Gallery. Retrieved 20 April 2013
  4. ^ Panofsky, 80
  5. Bauman, 37
  6. ^ Pavio, 212
  7. ^ Wood, 650
  8. Smith, 61
  9. Jones, 10–11
  10. Borchert, 22
  11. ^ Kemperdick, 19
  12. ^ Campbell, 218
  13. ^ Panofsky, 82
  14. ^ Pächt, 110
  15. ^ Campbell, 223
  16. ^ Meiss, 137
  17. ^ Panofsky, 88
  18. ^ Dhanens, 182
  19. Upton, 27
  20. Meiss, 144
  21. Kemperdick notes that Hans Holbein the Younger "used the same pair of hands for many of his portraits, so that they look much the same on 70-year-old William Warham and Anne Lovell, forty years his junior." Kemperdick, 20
  22. ^ Borchert, 36
  23. Apart from the dual portraits of the donors in his Ghent Altarpiece which were probably completed in 1431 or in the early months of the following year
  24. Meiss, 138
  25. Panofsky, 80
  26. ^ Campbell, 222
  27. ^ Paviot, 214
  28. Bauman, 35
  29. Panofsky, 81
  30. ^ Campbell, 220
  31. "Jan van Eyck". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 18 October 2014
  32. Weale, 109

Sources

  • Bauman, Guy. "Early Flemish Portraits 1425–1525". The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, volume 43, no. 4, Spring, 1986
  • Borchert, Till-Holger. Van Eyck. London: Taschen, 2008. ISBN 3-8228-5687-8
  • Campbell, Lorne. The Fifteenth-Century Netherlandish Paintings. London: National Gallery, 1998. ISBN 0-300-07701-7
  • Dhanens, Elisabeth. Hubert and Jan van Eyck. New York: Tabard Press, 1980. ISBN 0-914427-00-8
  • Harbison, Craig. Jan van Eyck, The Play of Realism. London: Reaktion Books, 1991. ISBN 0-948462-18-3
  • Jones, Susan Frances. Van Eyck to Gossaert. London: National Gallery, 2011. ISBN 1-85709-504-3
  • Kemperdick, Stephan. The Early Portrait, from the Collection of the Prince of Liechtenstein and the Kunstmuseum Basel. Munich: Prestel, 2006. ISBN 3-7913-3598-7
  • Meiss, Millard. "'Nicholas Albergati' and the Chronology of Jan van Eyck's Portraits". Burlington Magazine, volume 94, No. 590, May, 1952
  • Pächt, Otto. Van Eyck and the Founders of Early Netherlandish Painting. 1999. London: Harvey Miller Publishers. ISBN 1-872501-28-1
  • Paviot, Jacques. "The Sitter for Jan van Eyck's 'Leal Sovvenir". Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, volume 58, 1995
  • Panofsky, Erwin. "Who Is Jan van Eyck's 'Tymotheos'?". Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, volume 12v, 1949
  • Smith, Jeffrey Chipps. The Northern Renaissance. London: Phaidon Press, 2004. ISBN 0-7148-3867-5
  • Upton, Joel Morgan. Petrus Christus: His Place in Fifteenth-Century Flemish painting. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1989 ISBN 0-271-00672-2
  • Weale, W. H. J.. Hubert and John Van Eyck, their life and work. London: J. Lane Company, 1908
  • Wood, Wendy. "A new identification of the sitter in Jan van Eyck's Timotheus portrait". The Art Bulletin, volume 60, No. 4, December 1978

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