
Description
Oil Portrait of Sir Walter Raleigh English School, 18th century — in the manner of Hans Holbein the Younger Tudor court
Subject & Medium
An evocative antique portrait masterpiece of Sir Walter Raleigh (c. 1553–1618) —courtier, writer, soldier, and explorer. Executed in oil on wood panel , this is a later historical portrait in the Tudor court idiom circa 18th century, created to evoke the authority, refinement, and ceremonial presence associated with England’s golden age.
Composition & Technique
Raleigh is presented half-length, with a commanding, poised bearing that immediately reads as “court portrait” �. He wears a richly realized Elizabethan ensemble: a deep red doublet , crisp lace ruff , and a dark hat crowned by a plume feather. The painter’s approach privileges clarity and finish—carefully controlled modelling in the face, convincing flesh tone, and an emphasis on costume structure and ornament . The result is formal, dignified, and unmistakably aristocratic in spirit—ideal for refined interiors where historic portraiture performs as both art and atmosphere.
About the Sitter
Few names carry the same blend of history and legend as Sir Walter Raleigh . He rose rapidly at the Elizabethan court, was knighted in 1585 �?, and became synonymous with England’s early overseas ambitions and cultural confidence. His story contains everything collectors respond to: proximity to power, exploration, intellectual life, political drama—and an ultimately tragic end. In portrait form, Raleigh becomes an emblem of cultivated daring—perfect for a library, study, or formal reception space.
Historical Significance (with notable collector context)
The Tudor court aesthetic associated with Holbein has been a blue-chip category for serious collectors and major institutions for generations. In the United States, Henry Clay Frick’s collection (now The Frick Collection, New York) includes Holbein’s celebrated “Sir Thomas More”—a benchmark of Tudor portrait connoisseurship. Frick Collections Similarly, Andrew W. Mellon—founder-benefactor of the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.—assembled important works including Holbein pictures that entered the National Gallery of Art as the Andrew W. Mellon Collection. On the West Coast, the J. Paul Getty Museum also holds works by Holbein, reinforcing the artist’s lasting stature within premier museum collections. For collectors, this context matters because it explains why the “Holbein manner” remains an enduring language of prestige: it signals Tudor authority, cultivated taste, and the kind of historic gravitas that reads instantly in a refined American interior ��.
? About the Artist
Unsigned; English School. Best described as in the manner of Hans Holbein the Younger—meaning it consciously adopts the visual language associated with Tudor court portraiture: frontal authority, refined restraint, and crisp costume articulation. Because Holbein died in 1543 and Raleigh was born later, the Holbein reference is stylistic rather than literal . In collecting terms, it places the work firmly within the Tudor portrait aesthetic that remains perpetually desirable for country-house and library settings.
Signed
Unsigned
� The Frame
Presented in a highly decorative aged gilded wood frame, selected for its sympathetic period character and the way it elevates the portrait’s courtly palette. The frame materially enhances the “finished” presence of the piece—ready for immediate installation .
Dimensions Framed : 29.5 cm high × 24.5 cm wide Depth: 3.2 cm
Provenance
Accompanied by verso labels and handwritten notes, with documentation recording provenance through notable auction house Woolley & Wallis. The work is further associated with a private southern shire collection (as noted in accompanying materials). Subsequently curated and offered by & exhibited at the Famous Lord Hill Musuem documentation retained to verso, enhancing the painting’s archival presentation.
Why You’ll Love It
A sitter of real cultural weight — an iconic Elizabethan name with enduring collector appeal
Holbein-manner Tudor court style — formal, refined, and instantly “old world” in presence
Oil on panel — a classic, collectible support with authentic period character �
Decoratively strong at a manageable scale — ideal for curated walls, libraries, and studies
Ready-to-hang presentation — an aged gilded frame that completes the country-house look �
Documented provenance notes — retains verso labels and written records including Woolley & Wallis
High decorative impact — the ruff, red doublet, and commanding gaze read beautifully across a room �?️�
� Condition Report
Offered in fine, preserved antique condition. The painting surface presents well overall, showing foxing/staining, age craquelure, and minor areas of touch-up consistent with age and careful historic stewardship . The gilded frame shows expected wear—scuffs, small losses, and surface marks—commensurate with age.
Reserve: $12,960.00
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In the rare event that the item did not conform to the lot description in the sale, Chairish Auctions specialists are here to help. Buyers may return the item for a full refund provided you notify Chairish Auctions within 5 days of receiving the item.
Condition
Used
Buyer's Premium
20%
Oil Portrait of Sir Walter Raleigh In the Manner of Hans Holbein the Younger
Estimate $16,000-$19,000
Starting Price
$6,000
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Historic Oil Portraits and Period Interior
Feb 26, 2026 4:00 PM ESTNew York, NY, United States
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