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Tuesday, June 2, 2026 |
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| Joaquín Domínguez Bécquer's portrait of the Duchess of Montpensier comes to Colnaghi Madrid |
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Joaquín Domínguez Bécquer, Portrait of the Duchess of Montpensier, 1853, signed and dated, oil on canvas, 193 × 116 cm (76 × 45 5/8 in.).
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MADRID.- In the middle of the nineteenth century, Seville became a city of reinvention. Along the banks of the Guadalquivir, exiled royals, diplomats, writers, aristocrats and artists gathered in a place that seemed to offer both refuge and renewed prestige. For the Orléans family, driven from France after the fall of the July Monarchy in 1848, Seville became more than a temporary home. It became a stage on which political ambition, cultural identity and aristocratic ceremony could be carefully rebuilt.
At the center of this world was Infanta María Luisa Fernanda de Borbón, Duchess of Montpensier. Her image is captured with striking elegance in Joaquín Domínguez Bécquers Portrait of the Duchess of Montpensier, painted in 1853 and now presented at Colnaghi Madrid.
The large oil painting, signed and dated by the artist, shows the duchess at the age of 21, standing on the terraces of the Palacio de San Telmo. Dressed entirely in black silk and lace, she wears a Sevillian mantilla and holds a painted fan with a folded lace pañuelo. The portrait is not only a refined example of courtly representation. It is also a document of a particular historical moment, when the Montpensiers were attempting to establish a new political and cultural presence in Andalusia after the loss of their position in France.
María Luisa Fernandas marriage to Antoine dOrléans, Duc de Montpensier, had been one of the major diplomatic episodes of nineteenth-century Europe. The union was arranged during the so-called Spanish Marriages crisis of the 1840s, when Britain and France competed for influence over the Spanish succession. Louis-Philippe, King of the French, saw the marriage as a way to extend Orléanist influence in Spain. British diplomats viewed it with alarm, fearing the growth of French dynastic power.
Those ambitions were soon overturned. The revolutions of 1848 forced Louis-Philippe from the throne and sent the Orléans family into exile. The Duke and Duchess of Montpensier settled in Spain, and by 1849 had established themselves at the Palacio de San Telmo in Seville. Their household quickly became known as a corte chica, or little court, whose influence reached well beyond Andalusia.
Bécquers portrait belongs directly to that world. The duchesss black dress may be read partly as mourning attire, but it also functions as a statement of Andalusian aristocratic identity. The mantilla, lace and fan connect her to Sevillian custom and ceremony, suggesting how carefully the Montpensiers sought to adapt themselves to Spanish cultural life.
The clothing itself reflects the luxury economy that grew around the Montpensier household. The lace garments were produced by the tailor Domingo Margarit, whose workshops in Madrid and Barcelona supplied designs and materials to San Telmo. Other accessories, including gloves, fans and parasols, came from merchants on Calle Sierpes, then one of Sevilles most fashionable commercial streets.
Behind the apparent stillness of the portrait lies a city in transformation. During the 1850s, the Montpensiers invested in urban development, garden design and river transport between Seville and Sanlúcar de Barrameda, where they built a summer palace surrounded by botanical gardens. In the background of the painting, faint masts of steam vessels can be seen along the riverbank, a discreet but meaningful reference to the Dukes navigation projects on the Guadalquivir.
The result is a subtle balance between tradition and modernity. The duchess appears wrapped in the visual language of old Spain: mantilla, lace, black silk and aristocratic restraint. Yet the world around her was being reshaped by industrial change, infrastructure and new forms of mobility.
The Palacio de San Telmo also became an important center of artistic and literary patronage. Writers such as Prosper Mérimée, Théophile Gautier and Alexandre Dumas passed through the Montpensier circle, while Sevillian artists received commissions from the ducal household. The collection formed at San Telmo included Spanish Old Masters as well as contemporary works, helping to make Seville a vital center of Romantic artistic production.
Joaquín Domínguez Bécquer was one of the artists most closely connected with this environment. Born in Seville in 1817, he became a leading figure in Andalusian Romanticism and costumbrismo. His relationship with the Montpensiers began soon after their arrival in the city and continued for decades. By the early 1850s, he had become one of the principal painters associated with San Telmo, producing portraits, genre scenes and historical works for the ducal residences, while also teaching drawing to the young infantas.
In Portrait of the Duchess of Montpensier, Bécquer created more than an image of aristocratic elegance. He captured a moment when exile, ambition, fashion, politics and place came together in Seville. The painting stands as a portrait of a woman, but also of a court in exile and a city remade by the dreams of a displaced dynasty.
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