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It may be bonnie, but it's not Prince Charlie, embarrassed art gallery chiefs discover



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Published Date: 20 June 2008
A PORTRAIT of Bonnie Prince Charlie, by the French master Maurice-Quentin La Tour, has hung with pride in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery since it was snapped up in 1994.
But the pastel portrait of Prince Charles Edward Stuart is actually of his younger brother Henry, a London art researcher has concluded.

Last night, the gallery's former director, Dr Duncan Thomson, who oversaw the purchase of the work, admitted it was probably a portrait of Henry, a cardinal.

"It's become an awfully important image of Bonnie Prince Charlie. I think I have got to confess guilt in this instance," he said. The British Art Journal, the leading art research publication in Britain, published the new account of the picture.

"There is no doubt at all about it," said the editor, Robin Simon. "It's rare that anything is so spectacularly wrong."

The 5ft-tall pastel of the man in armour was bought at auction by the gallery for £22,000 as a portrait of Bonnie Prince Charlie. Its earlier history was unclear yesterday. It came to be seen as a classic image of the prince and was used as the cover for an edition of Fitzroy Maclean's classic biography of him.

Prince Charles Edward Stuart, also known as the Young Pretender, was the elder son of the "Old Pretender", James Edward Stuart, and the grandson of James II and VII. He fled into exile after his forces were defeated at Culloden.

Prince Henry Benedict, his brother, was born five years after Charles in 1725. He was known as the Duke of York or Cardinal York until his brother's death in 1788, when he claimed the title of Henry IX.

But earlier this year, a painting called Portrait of a Cardinal was auctioned in London from the collection of St Mary's Roman Catholic College, Twickenham. It was bought by London dealers Philip Mould. After cleaning and research, and comparing it to other pictures, it was identified as a lost portrait of Henry.

Bendor Grosvenor, a director of the firm, became convinced it was a copy of the portrait gallery's pastel.

"It was a dead ringer. He compared the details of his portrait of a cardinal with this La Tour pastel. It was a brilliant thing to have done," said Mr Simon.

So how then did the La Tour pastel in the portrait gallery became identified as the prince?

"You can see how it happened. People got muddled over who sat for this wonderful painter, La Tour, and missed the rather important point that Cardinal Henry had also sat for La Tour," said Mr Simon. "They thought it was only Bonnie Prince Charlie that sat for him in 1747."

One thing that fooled experts into thinking it was Charlie is the sitter's armour. But it is thought the picture was done before Henry became a cardinal. "They expected a cardinal to dress like a cardinal, not like a martial arts expert," he said.

No-one from the National Galleries of Scotland was available for comment last night.

The consolation prize for the gallery is that it still has a La Tour portrait. The picture is potentially worth hundreds of thousands of pounds or more, though it is perhaps less valuable than a portrait of the prince. The re-identification will not affect its standing as a work of art.

Another mystery is the whereabouts of La Tour's portrait of the prince, if it still exists.

Dr Thomson said: "I take it very seriously."

He added: "There's so much circumstantial evidence. It looks like Henry Benedict, I've got to confess.

"I was fooled by the fact he is wearing armour, which is what soldiers did, and cardinals don't wear armour.

"But in fact Henry Benedict had briefly been technically a soldier."

Beware the masterpiece that's a pig in a poke

ONE of Scotland's most famous paintings, Reverend Walker Skating on Duddingston Loch, has been the subject of a similar controversy.

For centuries attributed to Sir Henry Raeburn, in 2005 a senior curator at the National Portrait Gallery cast doubt on whether it was painted by Raeburn. The debate continues today.

A swathe of Jackson Pollock's dripped canvases have also been at the centre of serious academic scrutiny. His famous No5 piece, which was sold for £73million in 2006, was branded as a fake by some academics even as it went on sale.

And a collection of 32 recently discovered canvases attributed to the abstract expressionist are the subject of continued controversy.

Even contemporary artists are not immune. Grayson Perry, the cross-dressing Turner Prize-winning potter, has fallen victim to forgers.

An embarrassed Christie's has been forced to withdraw a glazed ceramic sculpture of a boar from auction tomorrow, after the artist told them that he had not made it.

Perry said it had to be a fake because it was too well made to be one of his early works.

The piece has been reattributed as "English school", reduced in value and returned to the seller.

The full article contains 848 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 19 June 2008 11:35 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

zigzag,

Tecumseh Canada 20/06/2008 14:51:45
What do you expect from the land of haggis and claymores except duff art gurus who spend money from the public purse to buy a bit of fake heritage.

Not to mention that this Bonnie Price Charlie has been overly romantized. Give me Willie Wallace anytime.

2

zigzag,

Tecumseh Canada 20/06/2008 14:53:17
Look what this article has done now...I've gone and P**#@d of my friend Laird Archie of Ramsay no end.
3

Mikko,

Drumnadrochit 20/06/2008 15:08:09
Thank goodness the forum is working again.
4

danbob,

20/06/2008 15:28:24
Fake stone of Scone, fake portraits. Anyone fancy buying the Hitler diary, It's genuine honest.
5

calgaryclyde,

Canada 20/06/2008 15:33:54
Yes, 22,000 pounds was a bargain, and if it's a good example of La Tour's work you'll be happy a misattribution got it into the gallery.
6

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 20/06/2008 15:52:05
Oh, people - stop whingeing and whining.

At least you have a SUPERB example of La Tour's work and not I find it to be MORE interesting that it is of Bonnie Prince Charlie's brother in military uniform before he "took orders".

Consider that your glass is half-full rather than half-empty and avoid the high blood pressure and (self)righteous indignation.
7

Mikko,

Drumnadrochit 20/06/2008 16:22:43
I never could understand why a bunch of hairy Scottish males were so taken by this effeminate French man.
8

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 20/06/2008 18:28:49

Long Live "Bonnie Prince Charlie"!!

"Bonnie Prince Charlie Linskaill",.. that is! :)
9

Phil1,

Edinburgh 20/06/2008 18:29:32
Surely he had a fourth cousin that could be bought for £500 pounds?
So the Scottish Art duffers won't buy Scotland's gretest living artist's work but they buy a fake.

Makes you want to weep!
10

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 20/06/2008 19:35:35
7 Mikko

It was the style of the time for persons of a certain elevated social rank. You must be in a state of apoplexy when you read that the male courtiers at Versailles under Louis XIV wore "high heels" to reflect their elevated status and also makeup to enhance their male beauty.

They were "fops" but if you called them "effeminate" to their faces you would end up on the sharp end of a sword wielded by a very aggressive and skilled and virile MAN.

You really must do more historical reading or research and watch the movies Barry Lyndon, The King Dances (Le Roi Danse), Vatel, Restoration, Tous Les Matins du Monde (All the Mornings of the World), and others.

They may give you a different stance on this matter.
11

Mikko,

Drumnadrochit 20/06/2008 20:40:04
#10 I'd take my chances against some poshed up numpties with bouffon hair-dos in high heels any day. The kind of sword I'd choose to chop their heads off with they wouldn't even be able to lift off the ground.
12

Skeely,

Edinburgh 22/06/2008 09:16:58
Bendor Grosvenor was not the first to make this discovery. Sandy Cheyne came to exactly the same conclusion in 2002 in the Leopard Magazine:
http://www.leopardmag.co.uk/feats/36/the-fake-pretender

 

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