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LOT 76

Frederick Kerseboom (German 1632-1690) Portrait of Ralph Freeman Jr. of Aspenden (1666-1742)Oil on canvas124 x 101cm (48¾ x 39¾ in.)Provenance: Tyttenhanger House

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Frederick Kerseboom (German 1632-1690)
Portrait of Ralph Freeman Jr. of Aspenden (1666-1742)
Oil on canvas
124 x 101cm (48¾ x 39¾ in.)

Provenance:
Anonymous Sale, Christie's, London, 5 March 1982, lot 18

It is purported that this portrait once hung in Tyttenhanger House, St. Albans

Ralph Freeman Jr. was born at Aspenden Hall in 1666. He was one of the leaders of the Hanoverian Tories in Queen Anne's reign, Freeman nevertheless remains a rather colourless, and in some ways inscrutable, figure. His youth was spent in a hothouse of piety under the influence of his father and of his tutor, James Bonnell. Freeman's father had wanted his son to 'be a scholar if he be capable of it', but Ralph jnr. entered Parliament in December 1697 at a by-election for Hertfordshire, a seat he was to hold until the accession of George II.

Tyttenhanger Park

The Tyttenhanger estate was originally owned by the Abbey of St Albans until the Dissolution of the Monasteries. It was then granted by the Crown in 1547 to Sir Thomas Pope, founder of Trinity College, Oxford. Pope died without issue in 1559 and following the death of his wife, Elizabeth it entered into the ownership of his nephew Sir Thomas Pope Blount (1552-1638), in 1598.

Blount's nephew, Sir Henry Blount (1602-1682), High Sheriff in 1661, demolished Pope's pre-existing manor house and built the present mansion on the site in 1654/5. The house was altered and extended throughout the 18th century.

Sir Henry's son Thomas Pope Blount (1649-1697) was created the first of the Blount baronets in 1680. On the death of the third Baronet in 1757 the estate passed to his niece and heiress Catherine Blount, daughter inlaw of the sitter.

The family retained ownership of the house until 1973 and of the present lot until it was sold at Christie's in 1982.

Condition Report:
The canvas has been relined. There is old craquelure throughout and significant infilling visible to the naked eye. Ultraviolet light reveals further retouching throughout, including three significant splits to the canvas and subsequent restoration to the arm area centre right. There are also some scuffs and blemishes to the paint surface, notably to the right of the sitter's head.

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[ translate ]

Frederick Kerseboom (German 1632-1690)
Portrait of Ralph Freeman Jr. of Aspenden (1666-1742)
Oil on canvas
124 x 101cm (48¾ x 39¾ in.)

Provenance:
Anonymous Sale, Christie's, London, 5 March 1982, lot 18

It is purported that this portrait once hung in Tyttenhanger House, St. Albans

Ralph Freeman Jr. was born at Aspenden Hall in 1666. He was one of the leaders of the Hanoverian Tories in Queen Anne's reign, Freeman nevertheless remains a rather colourless, and in some ways inscrutable, figure. His youth was spent in a hothouse of piety under the influence of his father and of his tutor, James Bonnell. Freeman's father had wanted his son to 'be a scholar if he be capable of it', but Ralph jnr. entered Parliament in December 1697 at a by-election for Hertfordshire, a seat he was to hold until the accession of George II.

Tyttenhanger Park

The Tyttenhanger estate was originally owned by the Abbey of St Albans until the Dissolution of the Monasteries. It was then granted by the Crown in 1547 to Sir Thomas Pope, founder of Trinity College, Oxford. Pope died without issue in 1559 and following the death of his wife, Elizabeth it entered into the ownership of his nephew Sir Thomas Pope Blount (1552-1638), in 1598.

Blount's nephew, Sir Henry Blount (1602-1682), High Sheriff in 1661, demolished Pope's pre-existing manor house and built the present mansion on the site in 1654/5. The house was altered and extended throughout the 18th century.

Sir Henry's son Thomas Pope Blount (1649-1697) was created the first of the Blount baronets in 1680. On the death of the third Baronet in 1757 the estate passed to his niece and heiress Catherine Blount, daughter inlaw of the sitter.

The family retained ownership of the house until 1973 and of the present lot until it was sold at Christie's in 1982.

Condition Report:
The canvas has been relined. There is old craquelure throughout and significant infilling visible to the naked eye. Ultraviolet light reveals further retouching throughout, including three significant splits to the canvas and subsequent restoration to the arm area centre right. There are also some scuffs and blemishes to the paint surface, notably to the right of the sitter's head.

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Sale price
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Estimate
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Time, Location
10 Mar 2020
United Kingdom
Auction House
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