CHRISTIAN FRIEDRICH ZINCKE (circa 1683-1767)
Portrait miniature of a Gentleman in crimson velvet jacket with a stock and lace jabot wearing a white wig
circa 1730
Enamel on metal
Oval, 45 mm (1 7/8 in) high
Gilt metal frame
£1,500
The distinguished gentleman in the current enamel remains unidentified; however, his commissioning of this portrait and his fine dress suggest he was a well-to-do, fashionable member of English society. While living in London, Zincke painted all manner of elite individuals, including royals, nobles, military officers, and scholars. The man in this portrait would have belonged to one of these groups, or at the very least he would have associated with them.
By 1730, it had become popular to wear coats unbuttoned and waistcoats undone at the top to show the ruffle attached to the shirt underneath, as the gentleman in this enamel has done.[1] Other portraits dating around 1730, including several enamels by Zincke himself,[2] show men wearing very similar ensemble. For example, the sitters in the portraits of Nathaniel Hooke in the National Portrait Gallery[3] and an unknown gentleman in Middlethorpe Hall [4] both wear these luminous, red coats.
[1] Anna Reynolds, Style & Society: Dressing the Georgians (Royal Collection Trust, 2023), 118.
[2] Christian Friedrich Zincke, Portrait of a gentleman, circa 1725, for sale with Sotheby’s April 2021. https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2021/old-master-paintings/portrait-of-a-gentleman-circa-1725.
[3] Style of Joseph Highmore, Portrait of an Unknown Gentleman in a Red Coat, circa 1725-1735, Middlethorpe Hall, National Trust [NT 1548241]. https://www.nationaltrustcollections.org.uk/object/1548241.
[4] Bartholomew Dandridge, Portrait of Nathaniel Hooke, circa 1726-1739, National Portrait Gallery [NPG 68]. https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw03231/Nathaniel-Hooke.
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