October 2011 October 2011 - 194-Year-Old Portrait of Swedenborg on Exhibit Through December
194-Year-Old Portrait of Swedenborg on Exhibit through December | This 1817 painting of Emanuel Swedenborg by noted Swedish portrait artist Carl Fredrik von Breda (1759–1818) was “rescued” from storage in 2003, cleaned by a conservator, and examined by an art historian. What was discovered in the process surprised everyone involved. (See below.) The von Breda portrait is currently on exhibit in Glencairn’s Upper Hall, where it will remain through the end of 2011. Photo: David Hershy, Lasting Expressions (Glencairn Museum number 06.OP.75) |
Halloween Festival at Glencairn Museum Stained Glass Workshop Follow the Star: World Nativities Exhibition Glad Tidings: A Celebration of Christmas |
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The Case of the Mysterious Disappearing—and Reappearing—Medal | Knowledge of this early and important oil-on-canvas portrait of Emanuel Swedenborg (1688–1772) has faded into obscurity over the years. For a long time it could be seen hanging in one of the buildings on the Academy of the New Church campus. (The Academy, founded in 1877, is an educational institution in Bryn Athyn based on Swedenborg’s theological writings.) Unfortunately, at some point the entire surface of the portrait was drenched in water, the result of a leak from above. Moisture caused the exterior layer of varnish to blanch, obscuring the paint layer with a white coating and preventing an exact assessment of its condition. To all appearances, the painting was damaged beyond repair. Interest in the painting was reawakened in 2003 when a 19th-century copy of the von Breda portrait was donated to the Glendale New Church in Ohio. Then, in the fall of 2005, the Academy’s painting was taken to an expert conservator for a preliminary examination. Our hope was that the painting would “clean up well”—perhaps even well enough to be placed back on public view—and that we would learn more about its history in the process.
Carl Fredrik von Breda (1759–1818) was a Swedish painter who studied at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Stockholm in the late 1700s, specializing in portrait painting. Exactly how he came to paint Swedenborg (forty-five years after the theologian’s death, and one year before his own) is not known. The Swedish Portrait Archives in Stockholm can find no record of the Bryn Athyn portrait, and it was not included in Emil Hultmark’s definitive book about the artist published in Stockholm in 1915 (Carl Fredrik von Breda: Sein Leben un sein Schaffen). Most likely the painting was brought to America within two or three decades of its completion. The earliest record found so far of the von Breda portrait as belonging to the Academy of the New Church dates to 1969. And However, according to the Office of Orders (Ordenskanslit) at the Swedish Royal Court, there is no evidence that Swedenborg ever received the Order of the Polar Star. Perhaps the insignia was painted over after this was discovered. It may never be known why von Breda depicted Swedenborg with this insignia in the first place, but it may be significant that an earlier portrait said to represent Swedenborg, by the Swedish painter Lorentz Pasch the Elder (1702–1766), displays the same mistake. Carl Fredrik von Breda’s portrait of Swedenborg will be on exhibit in Glencairn’s Upper Hall through the end of 2011. Admission to the Upper Hall and the rest of the first floor is FREE every Saturday afternoon. Stop by and see this fascinating painting! |
