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Portrait Of Heinrich Mühlegg Monogrammed & Dated 1600 By Lorenz Strauch, Gentleman Oil On Panel

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Portrait Of Heinrich Mühlegg Monogrammed & Dated 1600 By Lorenz Strauch, Gentleman Oil On Panel
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Object description :

"Portrait Of Heinrich Mühlegg Monogrammed & Dated 1600 By Lorenz Strauch, Gentleman Oil On Panel"
This magnificent oil on panel portrait depicts a handsome gentleman wearing an expensive black coat and an elaborate white collar.  The white sleeves are fashionably slashed to reveal a rich crimson red lining.   The extraordinary costume with its shimmering quality and costly fabrics and lace was an important marker of the wealth and status of the wearer.  The fundamental principle governing portraits at this time was the recording and defining in visual terms the position of a sitter in society.  The expensive fabrics, the attire, and the grand coat-of-arms as seen in the present portrait proclaim to every onlooker that this is a superior being.  It is an exquisite example from the period.

The coat-of-arms on the portrait is that of the noble Mühlegg (also Mülegg, Mühleck, Mullegg) family, who originated from the town of Bregenz (Vorarlberg, Austria) but later settled in Nürnberg, where the artist was active.  They were also notable merchants and bankers.  In genealogical terms the arms on the shield may be blazoned: Per pale Sable and Gules a pointed[?] Hat counterchanged turned up the chinstrap and finial[?] Or. The crest upon the helm may be blazoned: A pointed Hat per pale Gules and Sable turned up the finial[?] Or issuant from each side of the turn-up a Mace that on the dexter Sable that on the sinister Gules.

Johann Siebmacher’s Wappen Buch, an enormous and richly illustrated publication of Germanic arms, states that Martin Mühlegg, head of the court of Bregenz, moved to the thriving town of Nürnberg, bringing a large fortune with him.  He had two sons, Heinrich (1538-1604) and Hans (born 1550) - both became members of the ‘groβen Rath’ (the town council) in 1577.  His first son, Heinrich, had three sons: Paul, Heinrich (the younger) (c.1575-1654) (married Susanna Groland in 1596) and Hans (married Magdalene Fürleger in 1599).  His second son Hans, married Barbara Cronbergerin (who lived to see 54 grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren when she was 80 years old), was the father of Johann Christoph (died in Augburg in 1646) and Johann Heinrich, who is believed to be the last of his name and arms in Nürnberg.

Our portrait is dated 1600 and depicts a young man who is about 25 years of age.  It is difficult to ascertain conclusively which of the sons of Heinrich and Hans Mühlegg the portrait depicts - as five members of this family were alive in 1600 – but, by far, the most likely candidate is Heinrich (the younger), as subsequent editions of Siebmacher’s work, although with some inconsistences in the colours, ascribe the arms and crest specifically to him.  It also states that Heinrich died in 1654 at the age of 80 years; he would have been about 25 years old in 1600.  Siebmacher’s compendium was first published in 1605 and therefore his listing may also be contemporaneous with Strauch’s painting, lending further strength to this identification.

It is worth noting that this important sitter, Heinrich Mühlegg (c.1575-1654), had his likeness cast in a medal in 1625 (giving his age as 50 years old).

Lorenz Strauch was born in Nürnberg where he worked as a prominent portrait painter for the local patricians, but also painted architecture. He was educated by his father Hans Strauch and influenced by the Flemish portrait painter Nicolas Neufchatel.  His portrait of Johann Neudorfer and his son is in the Alte Pinakothek in Munich. A self-portrait from 1614 can be found at the Germanisches Nationalmuseum in Nürnberg.  His son, Hans Johann (born 1597), was also a painter.

Literature:       Wappen Buch, Siemacher, 1873 edition [vol.5, table 72, p.44], written entry: Müllegg, Heinrich, died 1654 at the age of 80 years, of Nuremberg. Per pale Azure and Sable a Hat ‘in verwechselten Farben auf der Spaltungslinie’ (literally ‘in mixed-up colours on the partition line’, presumably meaning counterchanged). Crest: The Hat Sable and Azure between two Maces the dexter Gules the sinister Sable. Mantled: Azure and Sable

Provenance:    Private collection Germany

Measurements: Height 79cm, Width 65.5cm framed (Height 31”, Width 25.75” framed)

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Quality British and European Fine Art, 17th to 20th century

Portrait Of Heinrich Mühlegg Monogrammed & Dated 1600 By Lorenz Strauch, Gentleman Oil On Panel
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