Collection
Miguel Fernández Durán y López de Tejeda, II marqués de Tolosa [Miguel Fernández Durán y López de Tejeda, II Marquis of Tolosa]
- c. 1786
- Oil on canvas
- 113 x 77 cm
- Cat. P_133
- Commissioned from the artist by the Banco Nacional de San Carlos
In 1786, Goya painted a portrait of the Marquis of Tolosa (Toledo, 1720 – Madrid, 1798), one of the biennial directors of Banco de San Carlos, which was hung in the General Assembly Hall. According to folio 65 of volume XVI of Banco de San Carlos’s daily payments register, he received direct payment of ten thousand reales de vellón on 30 January 1787 for this and his portraits of Charles III and of the Count of Altamira. This reflects the board’s decision of 30 December 1784 to have portraits made of the directors at the end of their terms of office. The marquis is shown in a palace uniform—possibly that of the king’s steward, a post he held after having been similarly employed by the queen since 1749 thanks to his marriage to the Marquis of Perales’s daughter. The cross of the Order of Calatrava, which he had obtained in 1748, is embroidered on his frock coat and next to it, on a red ribbon, he wears a sumptuous diamond badge with an enamelled red cross in the inner circle. This may belong to the same order of knighthood, and would have been set amidst such gems to distinguish him from other knights. Goya follows the format undoubtedly specified by the bank: a three-quarter-length depiction of the marquis in front of a stone parapet that appears to have been prepared for an inscription with his name and titles, as was frequent in this type of official portraits when, as was generally the case, they were part of a series. In that sense, it is similar to Francisco Folch de Cardona’s 1788 depiction of Juan de Piña y Ruiz, which has the same proportions but lacks the painted parapet.
Goya achieves a beautiful portrait of the Marquis of Tolosa, possibly closer to official portraiture from the Enlightenment than his freer and more modern depiction of Toro-Zambrano. This is due to his presentation of Tolosa in uniform, possibly that of the king’s steward or chamberlain, and the insignias of the military order, as well as the staff of office of the bank’s directors, which also appears in his portrait of Larumbe. The king and Cabarrús also held these staffs in their portraits for the bank, but they were finally hidden by a change in the arrangement of the figures. The present work stands out for the simplicity and immediacy of the rendering of Tolosa’s image and its masterful reflection of the feelings and sensitivity discernible in his face. This compensates for the more regulated stereotyping of the other portraits, which may reflect the bank’s demand for uniformity in the images of its directors. In these works—and even more so here—the artist had already transformed the cold official portrait into something intimate and personal, profoundly naturalist and direct, in which the model’s slightly humorous gaze and ironic facial expression suggest he has established a rapport with his portraitist and is about to provide an ironic answer to one of the artist’s questions. This work’s intimate character, and its unquestionable success at capturing the marquis’s difficult and highly personal physiognomy, are perhaps what led to the making of a copy for his palace. This, however, was rejected by his son, who asked his heirs “to exchange the portrait of my beloved father […] for the original from which it was copied, painted by the distinguished painter Goya, which is hanging in Banco de San Carlos.” Clearly, he was able to appreciate its quality.
The Marquis of Tolosa inherited his title when he was just one year old due to the untimely death of his father, who had been Secretary of State and of the Department of War, the Navy and the Indies. He also received the considerable family fortune, including an important collection of paintings and tapestries that must have increased the young man’s love of the arts. Contrary to reigning conventions for aristocratic youth, his son studied architecture at the Collegio Clementino in Rome, and in 1792 his grandson was admitted to the Academia de San Fernando at the early age of eleven. Both must have appreciated Goya’s methods of revealing their forebear’s personality, including his placement of the figure against a dark background. With only a few highlights, the rich gold embroidery, precisely executed with a few light impastos, forms lines of light and colour that lead the viewer’s gaze to the marquis’s sensitive face.
Biennial Director of the Banco de San Carlos 1783 - 1787
He was very young when he succeeded to the title of Marquis of Tolosa, as his father died on 11 October 1721, a year after his birth. Little is known of the Marquis’s biography, and the scant data compiled in these notes come from those published by Nigel Glendinning and José Miguel Medrano (Goya y el Banco Nacional de San Carlos, Banco de España, Madrid 2005, pp. 106-108). In 1749, when he was 29 and a Mayordomo de Semana (member of the permanent retinue) to H.M. the Queen, he married the daughter of the Marquis and Marchioness of Perales, Doña Antonia María Pinedo y Velasco, with whom he had several children. A knight of the Order of Calatrava from 1749, he was also Mayordomo de Semana to King Charles III, who granted him the habits of three Military Orders. He inherited important works of art, among them thirty-one tapestries and paintings by major artists like Dürer, Pedro de Vos, Tintoretto and Guercino, according to the information compiled in the “Liquidation, accounting, partition and division of the goods and chattels of Don Miguel Fernz. Durán”.
He was a biennial director of Banco de San Carlos from 1783 to 1787. The date of his death is unknown.
Other works by Francisco de Goya y Lucientes