Grand Duchess Catherine Pavlovna of Russia, Queen of Würtemberg (1788-1819)
c.1796RCIN 420714
Princess Catherine (1788-1819) was the fourth daughter of Tsar Paul I. In 1809, she married George, duke of Oldenburg, who died in 1812. In 1816, she married William I, king of Württemburg. This miniature is a copy of the full-size oil painting in the Pavlovsk in St Petersburg, one of a set of portraits by Dmitri Levitski of the four daughters (Alexandra, Helena, Mary and Catherine) of Paul I. They were painted to commemorate the foundation in 1796 of the Seminary of St Catherine, the star of whose Order the princess is wearing.
The images are believed to be copies after bust length portraits by Dmitry Levitsky, Professor of Portrait Painting at the Academy of Arts. The miniatures may have been painted by one of the circle of Russian miniaturists Petr Zharkov, as several very similar autographed works depicting the eldest daughters can be seen at Pavlovsk Palace. The Grand Duchesses are all shown wearing the Order of St Catherine, bestowed on each daughter on the occasion of her christening. Unlike her elder sisters, Grand Duchess Ekaterina is depicted without a striped coat, her hair worn loose, demonstrating her immaturity. Grand Duchess Elena rests her elbow on a desk, a number of books visible at the left, perhaps illustrative of her grandmother Catherine the Great’s keen supervision of the Grand Duchess’s education.
The miniature is inscribed on the backing card in ink: Madame La Grande Duchesse Catherine. There is an illegible inscription, possibly a signature and a date, along the lower edge between her arm and hip.
Text adapted from Russia: Art, Royalty and the Romanovs, London, 2018.