Robert Kerr, Earl and subsequently Marquis of Lothian  thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Portrait Miniatures, Room 90a, The International Music and Art Foundation Gallery

Robert Kerr, Earl and subsequently Marquis of Lothian

Portrait Miniature
1667 (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This strikingly beautiful miniature was painted by a young rising star, Peter Cross. The soft-focus effect of this work is achieved by using many dots rather than lines. The unusual virtuosity of this talented artist soon attracted the social and political elite of the newly restored court of King Charles II. This portrait is of Robert Kerr, Earl of Lothian, a man of growing influence at court, a fact that reveals something of the complexity of this time, since his father had been prominent in the rebellion against Charles II’s father, the executed Charles I. Kerr is painted wearing the newly fashionable ‘full bottomed wig’ that Charles II introduced, and which the British judiciary still wears today.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleRobert Kerr, Earl and subsequently Marquis of Lothian (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Watercolour on vellum put down on a leaf from a table-book
Brief description
Portrait miniature of Robert Kerr, Earl and subsequently Marquis of Lothian, watercolour on vellum, painted by Peter Cross, 1667.
Physical description
Portrait of a man, turned to, and looking to right, and wearing a long wig, neckcloth tied with red ribbon and armour. Features finely and regularly stippled in brown and sanguine, with touches of green, yellow and blue, and with white highlights in the eyes, on a pale yellowish carnation ground; hair washed and hatched in transparent browns, heightened with opaque grey and ochre; armour washed and hatched in transparent grey and brown, with opaque pale grey and white for the lights; cravat in pale grey wash, modelled in detail with thick white, the ribbon in red; the sleeve in opaque grey-blue washes, the embroidery in metallic gold and ochre; the background to the left in solid dark brown gummy wash, and to the right a sky in opaque washes and stipples of blue, grey and orange; on vellum put down on a leaf from a table-book.

Frame: A copper-gilt oval locket, the convex back soldered to, and overlapping, the straight sides, which hold the bevelled edge of the flat glass at the front in a bezel; the hanger of flat D-section, attached to the top of the backplate, and dividing into two diminishing spirals of five turns, set well back on the locket side. This feature suggests that the locket was intended to have a front cover, but there is no indication that hinges or fastenings have been removed. The locket, which is not of good quality, may be a later substitute, showing an imperfect understanding on the part of the silversmith of the principles of seventeenth-century locket construction.
Dimensions
  • Height: 75mm
  • Width: 63mm
Dimensions taken from John Murdoch Seventeenth-century English Miniatures in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum. London: The Stationery Office, 1997.
Content description
Portrait of a man wearing a wig, neckcloth tied with ribbon and armour.
Styles
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'PC' (Signed in gold)
  • 'The Lord Kerr / 1667 / Peeter Cross / fecitt.' (Inscribed on the back, in graphite)
Object history
Provenance: Acquired from an unknown source by Greta S Heckett; sold Sotheby's 11 July 1977, lot 140, bt anon.; sold Sotheby's 19 October 1981, lot 58, bt by the Museum.
Subjects depicted
Summary
This strikingly beautiful miniature was painted by a young rising star, Peter Cross. The soft-focus effect of this work is achieved by using many dots rather than lines. The unusual virtuosity of this talented artist soon attracted the social and political elite of the newly restored court of King Charles II. This portrait is of Robert Kerr, Earl of Lothian, a man of growing influence at court, a fact that reveals something of the complexity of this time, since his father had been prominent in the rebellion against Charles II’s father, the executed Charles I. Kerr is painted wearing the newly fashionable ‘full bottomed wig’ that Charles II introduced, and which the British judiciary still wears today.
Bibliographic reference
Murdoch, John. Seventeenth-century English Miniatures in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum. London: The Stationery Office, 1997.
Collection
Accession number
P.41-1981

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Record createdDecember 15, 1999
Record URL
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