William Graham, 7th Earl of Menteith and 1st Earl of Airth, 1589 - 1661. President of the Privy Council
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About this artwork
William Graham was well-known for his dislike of Covenanters. He was President of the Privy Council, Lord President of the Court of Session, and advised Charles I on political matters in his Scottish kingdom. His fall from grace was provoked by his pursuit of an old genealogical claim to the earldom of Strathearn, which his enemies presented as a challenge to the Scottish throne. Jamesone painted this portrait and that of Archibald Napier on separate canvases, but they are now joined together in their early nineteenth-century frame. They were painted for the artist’s great patron, Sir Colin Campbell of Glenorchy, as part of his series of portraits of friends and family.
Updated before 2020
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artist:George Jamesone (1589/90 - 1644) Scottish
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title:William Graham, 7th Earl of Menteith and 1st Earl of Airth, 1589 - 1661. President of the Privy Council
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date created:1637
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materials:Oil on canvas
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measurements:106.70 x 128.30 cm; Framed: 112.00 x 133.00 x 4.50 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Purchased 1956
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accession number:PG 1834
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gallery:
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depicted:
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subject:
George Jamesone
George Jamesone
Born in Aberdeen, the portrait painter George Jamesone was the son of a master-mason. He was apprenticed to the decorative painter, John Anderson of Edinburgh, in 1612. His earliest patrons were the merchants and academics of Aberdeen, but he soon became the painter to the nobility of the north...