
Saint George and the Dragon
Rogier van der Weyden·c. 1432/1435
Historical Context
Rogier van der Weyden's Saint George and the Dragon from around 1432-1435 depicts the legendary soldier-saint dispatching the dragon in a landscape setting that combines precise observation of vegetation and terrain with heraldic formal arrangement. Saint George was patron of England, Burgundy, and many other European political entities — this small panel may have been painted for a Burgundian court patron, as Rogier was appointed official painter to the city of Brussels in 1436 and worked extensively for Burgundian noble patrons. The miniaturist scale and jewel-like precision of the panel suggest it was intended for private devotion or as a diplomatic gift rather than public display.
Technical Analysis
Rogier's oil on panel demonstrates remarkable precision in rendering the saint's armor, the dragon's scales, and the landscape backdrop at miniature scale, with dynamic figure composition and luminous color that create vivid narrative impact.
Provenance
Possibly Grudna-Grudzinski family, Poznan.[1] General de Plaoutine, Saint Petersburg by 1902, Nice by 1917, and London by 1920;[2] purchased 1923 by Lady Evelyn Mason [d. 1944], cousin of General de Plaoutine's wife, London;[3] by inheritence to her daughter, Mrs. L.A. Impey, Chilland, Hitchin Abbas, near Winchester; (sale, Sotheby's, London, 16 March 1966, no. 1); purchased by NGA. [1] A seal at the lower right corner of the panel reverse bears a coat of arms that has been identified with a high degree of probability as that of the Polish family Grudna-Grudzinski. Mention of the painting in their collection has not been found. It should be noted, however, that Joanna of the house of Grudna-Grudzinski married the Russian Grand Duke Constantine on 24 May 1820. She received the title of Princess von Lowicz (Jnowraczlaw) from Czar Alexander. If the painting did belong to the Grudna-Grudzinski family, it is possible that it came to Saint Petersburg through the person of Joanna. Perhaps it was given to her as a wedding present. [2] Claude Philips, "Impressions of the Bruges Exhibitions," _The Fortnightly Review_, N.S. 72 (1902), 598, is the earliest mention of the painting being in the Plaoutine collection, Saint Petersburg. Plaoutine still owned the picture in 1920; see _Pictures and English Furniture of the Chippendale Period_ [exh. cat. Burlington Fine Arts Club] (London, 1920), no. 30. The General himself did not live in London, however. Mrs. L.A. Impey, in a letter of 20 August 1984 to John Oliver Hand in the NGA curatorial files, states that Plaoutine emigrated to Nice in 1917 and in 1920 sent the painting to his wife's cousin, Lady Evelyn Mason (Mrs. Impey's mother), in England. He asked her to try to sell the painting, but, the English galleries being short of resources at the time, Lady Evelyn finally bought it herself in 1923. [3] Mrs. L.A. Impey, letter to John Oliver Hand of 20 August 1984, in NGA curatorial files.
See It In Person
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