Lumley inventories
The Lumley inventories are a group of inventories documenting the extensive collections of paintings, books, sculptures, silver and furniture accumulated by John, 1st Baron Lumley (c.1533–1609). The most celebrated of these, a manuscript volume which incorporates a considerable amount of heraldic and genealogical material as well as the inventory itself, is sometimes known as the "Red Velvet Book" (from its later binding), and sometimes simply as "the Lumley Inventory". It is often dated to 1590, although it is in reality a more complex composite volume including material dating from 1586 to 1595. Further inventories were drawn up for purposes of probate on Lord Lumley's death in 1609; and others when parts of the collection were sold in the 18th and early 19th centuries.
The inventories
The greater part of the Red Velvet Book comprises genealogical material, reflecting Lumley's fascination with his own ancestry. The earliest and most extensive pedigree, which charts the Lumley descent from a Saxon nobleman named Liulph, is dated 1586, and has been identified as the work of Robert Glover, Somerset Herald.[1]
The main inventory records the household contents, including artworks, at Lumley's residences of
A catalogue of Lumley's library of some 3,000 volumes was prepared by Anthony Alcock (a member of the household of Lumley's protégé Anthony Watson) in 1596.[4] Another inventory of the pictures at Lumley Castle, and a revised catalogue of the library, were drawn up following Lumley's death in April 1609. Further inventories of paintings were compiled for the sales of much of the collection in 1785 and 1807.
History of the Lumley collections
The Lumley Inventories demonstrate Lumley's passion for collecting portraits.[5] His collection was the largest in Elizabethan England and was housed in three of his residences – his house on Tower Hill as well as Lumley Castle and Nonsuch Palace.[6] The collection included portraits of 196 contemporary sitters, and (unlike most inventories of the period) often named the painter.[7]
The nucleus of the collection was acquired from his father-in-law,
Lord Lumley was the uncle of
The bulk of Lumley's library passed on his death as a gift to Henry, Prince of Wales, and in due course to the British Museum (now the British Library) in 1757.[17]
Scholarly awareness and publication
The first antiquarian to become aware of the Red Velvet Book was George Vertue, who mentioned it in notes made in 1735. Shortly afterwards it was also noted by Horace Walpole.[18] An edited version of the 1609 inventory of paintings was published in Robert Surtees’ History and Antiquities of the County Palatine of Durham in 1820.[19]
The textual content of the Red Velvet Book (excluding the genealogical material and the drawings) was published in 1904 by Edith Milner in her book Records of the Lumleys of Lumley Castle.[20] It was published again, omitting the description of Lumley Castle but including 20 monochrome plates of the drawings, by Lionel Cust in 1918 in the sixth volume of the Walpole Society. Cust also included four of the later (much shorter) inventories, one undated, one of 1785, and two of 1807.[14] In the same volume, Mary Hervey published the 1609 inventory of paintings in full.[13]
The 1609 library catalogue was published by Sears Jayne and Francis Johnson in 1956.[21]
The Red Velvet Book in its entirety was published in a limited edition by the Roxburghe Club in 2010, in full colour facsimile and accompanied by twelve scholarly contextual essays, under the editorship of Mark Evans.[22]
Use of the inventories in art history
The inventories have been described as "the most important documents in the history of English art in the second half of the sixteenth century".
References
- ^ Ann Payne, "Heraldry and Genealogies", in Evans 2010, pp. 21–7 (23).
- ^ Tittler, Robert (2012). Portraits, Painters, and Publics in Provincial England. p. 45.
- ^ Rowan Watson, "The Lumley Inventory and Pedigree: description of the manuscript"’, in Evans 2010, pp. 135-9.
- ^ Jayne and Johnson 1956, pp. 9, 32–5.
- ^ National Portrait Gallery
- ^ a b Strong, Roy. Tudor and Stuart Monarchy. The Boydell Press. p. 119.
- ^ Stourton, James; Sebag-Montefiore, Charles (2012). The British as art collectors. Scala. p. 43.
- ^ a b c Piper 1957.
- ^ Bruyn, Josua, 2003, Hubert (Huybrecht) Beuckelaer, an Antwerp portrait painter, and his English patron, the Earl of Leicester in Roding, Juliette, Dutch and Flemish Artists in Britain 1550–1800, Primavera, page 105
- ^ "The Northwick Park portrait of Lady Jane Grey". Archived from the original on 2014-01-29. Retrieved 2013-04-07.
- ^ Chaney, Edward; Mack, Peter, eds. (1994). England and the Continental Renaissance. Boydell Press. p. 196.
- ^ Millar, Oliver (1972). The Age of Charles I. The Tate Gallery. p. 11.
- ^ a b Hervey 1918.
- ^ a b Cust 1918.
- ^ Hearn, Karen (1995). Dynasties. Tate Publishing. p. 158.
- ^ Philip Mould Historical Portraits
- ^ Jayne and Johnson 1956, pp. 14–17.
- ^ Mark Evans, "The Lumley Inventory: contents and context", in Evans 2010, pp. 13–19 (13).
- ^ Surtees, Robert (1820). The History and Antiquities of the County Palatine of Durham. Vol. 2. London. p. 161.
- ^ Milner 1904, pp. 322–37.
- ^ Jayne and Johnson 1956.
- ^ Evans 2010.
- ^ Waterhouse, Ellis (1994). Painting in Britain, 1530-1790 (4th ed.). Yale University Press. p. 338.
- JSTOR 857800.
Bibliography
- Barron, Kathryn (2003). "The Collecting and Patronage of John, Lord Lumley (c.1535–1609)". In Chaney, Edward (ed.). The Evolution of English Collecting: Receptions of Italian Art in the Tudor and Stuart Periods. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 125–58. ISBN 0300102240.
- Barron, Kathryn (2007) [2004]. "Lumley, John, first Baron Lumley (c.1533–1609)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. . (subscription required)
- Cust, Lionel (1918). "The Lumley Inventories". Walpole Society. 6: 15–35.
- Evans, Mark, ed. (2010). The Lumley Inventory and Pedigree: art collecting and lineage in the Elizabethan Age: facsimile and commentary on the manuscript in the possession of the Earls of Scarbrough. ISBN 978-0-903912-11-2.
- Gooch, Leo (2009). A Complete Pattern of Nobility: John Lord Lumley (c.1534-1609). Rainton Bridge: University of Sunderland Press.
- Hervey, Mary F.S. (1918). "A Lumley Inventory of 1609". Walpole Society. 6: 37–46.
- Milner, Edith (1904). Benham, Edith (ed.). Records of the Lumleys of Lumley Castle. London: George Bell.
- Jayne, Sears; Johnson, Francis R., eds. (1956). The Lumley Library: the catalogue of 1609. London: British Museum.
- Piper, David(1957). "The 1590 Lumley Inventory: Hilliard, Segar and the Earl of Essex". Burlington Magazine. 99: 224–31, 299–303.
- Simon, Robin (2010). "The Lumley Inventory and the Lumley Chapel". British Art Journal. 11 (1): 4–5.