Author(s): Małgorzata Możdżynska-Nawotka / Language(s): Polish
Issue: 1/2014
The article is concerned with the coronation dress of Poland’s last king Stanisław August
Poniatowski depicted in his official portraits: the one painted by Christoph Joseph Werner
soon after the ceremony in 1764 and especially the splendid portrait en habit de couronment
which the King commissioned from Marcello Bacciarelli for the Marble Room of the Royal
Castle in Warsaw (1767–1771). Both portraits show the newly crowned king not in the white
pontifical robes he donned during the sacred act of coronation but in the clothes he changed
into afterwards and wore during the following public celebration. Rather than selecting the
Polish national costume, which would be regarded as appropriate and was expected of him,
he chose the white satin suit trimmed with gold laces. In contemporary sources this costume
was referred to as Spanish but so far it has remained a mystery what the word ‘Spanish’ really
meant in this context and consequently what were the King’s reasons and motivations for
selecting this attire. By pointing to analogies in Western painting and surviving garments in
museum collections and by analysing contemporary witness accounts, the author identifies
the king’s garb as a Vandyke costume, the type of historical fancy dress which had originated
in England and was also popular in France where it was often worn with a ruff and called
Spanish.’ It is also argued that this costume was selected by the King, quite extravagantly,
considering the occasion, for related aesthetic, ideological-cum-political, and personal reasons.
It looked up to the tradition of Rubens and Van Dyke, whose art the King knew and admired.
The monarch’s personal contacts with Madame Geoffrin, the famous Parisian hostess who had
played an instrumental role in promoting the ‘Spanish’ costume on the French art scene, likely influenced his choice. The plumed hat with the characteristic black and white feathers, which is
not featured in the above mentioned portraits but appears in a later portrait by Bacciarelli, was
part of the original coronation dress providing a specific and meaningful reference to Henry IV,
King of France, whom Stanisław August admired and tried to emulate as the paramount of
regal virtues and the model of enlightened and tolerant ruler. Cosmopolitan, rooted in Western
artistic and courtly tradition, the King’s coronation dress presented a deliberate departure from
the Polish national costume, which he was expected to adopt but refused to and the traditional
values it represented. On a personal and psychological level, handsome and rather proud of his
appearance, Stanisław August was reportedly very well aware of the costume showing off his
assets splendidly. He regarded Bacciarelli’s painting depicting him in this picturesque garb as
his most faithful portrait. The King’s behavior while parading in the Spanish dress on the streets
of Warsaw, especially the theatrical manner of presentation and exaggerated courtesy towards
ladies, recalled the spirit of courtly fêtes galantes of which similar costumes were characteristic.
It seems that the Vandyke costume (or costume à la Henri IV) made its first public appearance
in Poland at a very special historical moment and in quite unusual circumstances, an eloquent
sign of the newly crowned King’s willingness to break off from tradition and, presumably, reform
the state as King Henry IV had done. This kind of fancy dress would subsequently be adopted
at the court, particularly by the ladies of artistic taste who sympathized with the King’s policies.
The author identifies a number of male and female portraits showing variations of this costume,
which would retain its relevance throughout the reign of Stanisław August. The theme would
conclude, poignantly and melancholically, with his portrait in the costume of Henry IV painted
by Élisabeth-Louise Vigée Le Brun in St Petersburg in 1797, already after the abdication of
Stanisław August and shortly before his death in exile.
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