William Scrots

William Scrots

William (or Guillim) Scrots (or Scrotes or Stretes) (active 1537 – 1553) [ [http://www.getty.edu/vow/ULANServlet?english=Y&find=william+scrots&role=&page=1&nation= Getty Union Name List] ] was a painter of the Tudor court and an exponent of the Mannerist style of painting in the Netherlands.Gaunt, 27.] He is first heard of when appointed a court painter to Mary of Habsburg, Regent of the Netherlands, in 1537.Rothenstein, 24.] In England, he followed Hans Holbein as King's Painter to Henry VIII in 1546, with a substantial annual salary of £62 10s, [Gaunt, 28.] over twice as much as Holbein's thirty pounds a year. [Richard Gay in T Kren & S McKendrick (eds), "Illuminating the Renaissance - The Triumph of Flemish Manuscript Painting in Europe",p. 434, Getty Museum/Royal Academy of Arts, 2003, ISBN 19033973287] He continued in this role during the reign of the boy king Edward VI. His salary was stopped on Edward's death in 1553, after which it is not known what became of him, though it is presumed he left England. [Gaunt, 29. Strong 1969 says that Scrots "presumably" died between September 1553 and September 1554 (p. 69)]

Little more is known of Scrots than that his paintings showed an interest in ingenious techniques and detailed accessories. Scrots was paid in 1551 for three "great tables", two of which were portraits of Edward delivered to the ambassadors as gifts for foreign monarchs, and the third a "picture of the late earle of Surrey attainted."Karen Hearn, "Dynasties", p. 52] Two full-length portraits of Edward VI in a pose similar to that of Holbein's portrait of his father, one now in the Royal Collection (left) and another now in the Louvre (below), are attributed to Scrots and are likely to be these two paintings.Strong, "English Icon", 1969, p. 71] [Art historian William Gaunt assumes that this painting is by Scrots. Gaunt, 28.] Scrots also painted an "anamorphic" profile of Edward VII, distorted so that it is impossible to view it normally except from a special angle to the side. This optical trick is similar to that used by Holbein in his painting " The Ambassadors" and in contemporary portraits of Francis I and Ferdinand I. Later, when the painting was exhibited at Whitehall Palace in the winter of 1591–92, it created a sensation, and important visitors were all taken to see it. [Lukacher, 74.]

In the words of art historian Ellis Waterhouse, "although Scrots was not a painter of high creative or imaginative gifts, he knew all the latest fashions, and a series of paintings appeared at the English court during the next few years which could vie in modernity with those produced anywhere in northern Europe". [Quoted by Lukacher, 74.] In particular, Scrots seems to have helped popularise the full-length portrait at the same time as it became fashionable on the continent.Rothenstein, 24.]

Scrots's portrait of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, takes a strikingly different approach to portraiture from that previously adopted by Holbein and other painters in England. [The status of the portrait is the subject of debate, although it is clear there was a portrait of Howard by Scrots. Four versions exist, of which the one illustrated, still owned by Howard's descendents at Arundel Castle, is agreed to be the oldest, and the only one that could be original. The original is documented as a "table", which Mary Edmond (in Grove) takes to mean a panel painting, although Hearn says the term can be used for a painting on canvas, such as the Arundel version. Some historians consider that the rounded tops of the shields betray the painting as a later copy, since such shields were painted with flat tops in the Tudor period, but Hearn illustrates a French engraving of 1540 which may have been the inspiration for the frame and which features round-topped shields. See the arguments for the dating of the painting in William Sessions's biography of Howard, 341, and discussion of the French engraving in Hearn, p. 52] This, especially in the enframing architectural statuary, is in the Mannerist style that had originated in Florence and then spread to the France of Francis I and to the Netherlands. It exhibits the elongation of the figure typical of the style.Gaunt, 27.] The artist depicts the earl dressed in fantastically ornamented clothing and surrounds him with architectural details and emblems from classical sculpture. These may relate to the only large-scale Mannerist project in England, then nearing completion, Nonsuch Palace in Surrey. The painting set a new fashion for English portraiture. [Williams, 228.] The earl was executed in 1547 on suspicion of treason; some (indeed most) of the evidence brought against him was that he had made inappropriate use of the Royal Arms of England, as indeed he does here. He was of royal descent, but these were not his personal arms. A heraldic drawing was produced in evidence, but this painting does not seem to have been mentioned at his trial. [ [http://parsonsfamily.blogware.com/indiI1213.html "The dangers of heraldry" - third item down] ]

A three-quarter length suggests that the panels on which these two portraits are painted may have come from the same tree; see Karen Hearn, "Dynasties", p.47-48]

Gallery

Notes

References

*Gaunt, William. "Court Painting in England". London: Constable, 1980. ISBN 0094618704.
*Hearn, Karen, ed. "Dynasties: Painting in Tudor and Jacobean England 1530-1630." New York: Rizzoli, 1995. ISBN 0-8478-1940-X.
*Lukacher, Ned. "Time-Fetishes: The Secret History of Eternal Recurrence". Durham (NC): Duke University Press, 1999. ISBN 0822322730.
* Rothenstein, John. "An Introduction to English Painting". London: I.B.Tauris, 2001 edition. ISBN 1860646786.
*Sessions, William A. "Henry Howard, the Poet Earl of Surrey: A Life." Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999. ISBN 0198186258.
*Strong, Roy: "The English Icon: Elizabethan and Jacobean Portraiture", 1969, Routledge & Kegan Paul, London
* Waterhouse, Ellis. " Painting in Britain, 1530-1790". New Haven (CT): Yale University Press/Pelican History of Art, 1994 edition. ISBN 0300058330.
*Williams, Neville. "Henry VIII and His Court". London: Chancellor, 1971. ISBN 0907486177.


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