- João Maria Correia Ayres de Campos, 1st Count of Ameal
João Maria Correia Ayres de Campos, 1st Count of Ameal (
February 5 ,1847 –July 13 ,1920 ) was a Portuguesepolitician ,art collector , maecenas andhumanist , renowned chiefly for having assembled one ofPortugal 's largest and most important private art collections, as well as what was at the time the largest private library in the country.Early life
João Maria Correia Ayres de Campos was born in
Coimbra to João Correia Ayres de Campos, a renowned lawyer and amateurarcheologist from a family of the lower nobility, and his wife Leonor de Sá Correia. As a young man, he studyed Law at theUniversity of Coimbra , graduating in 1868, and joined the "Partido Regenerador", a conservativepolitical party opposed to the "Partido Progressista" during the Liberal Monarchy. In 1876, João married Maria Amélia de Sande Mexia Vieira da Mota, Countess of Juncal. They had four children:*João de Sande Magalhães Mexia Salema Ayres de Campos, 2nd Count of Ameal (1877)
*Maria de Sande Mexia Ayres de Campos (1880)
*Jorge de Sande Mexia Ayres de Campos (1886)
*Pedro de Sande Mexia Ayres de Campos Vieira da Mota, 2nd Count of Juncal (1889)Political career
Rising to proeminence within the local chapter of the "Partido Regenerador", João Maria Correia Ayres de Campos was elected mayor of his hometown of Coimbra in 1886, and later appointed deputy at the Portuguese
National Parliament .He was created
Count of Ameal by kingCharles I of Portugal in 1901, upon his retirement from active political life. To embelish hiscoat-of-arms he chose the motto "Ars Super Omnia" (Art Above All).The art collection
A wealthy land-owner whose property had substantially increased in value due to the city's quick urban expansion, João Maria Correia Ayres de Campos began to amass his large collection in the 1880s. Having bought the 15th-century buildings of the former monastery and college of "S. Tomás", in Coimbra, he transformed them into a large palace of
neoclassical design. The Count then filled its rooms (most of which still retained their original gothic form in spite of the building's external neoclassical appearance) with precious furniture,Old Master paintings and about 30.000 rare books.Among his collection of painting, there was one canvas by
Caravaggio ("Saint John the Baptist"), one large drawing byRembrandt ("Head of a Man"), a large "Glorification of the Virgin" byRubens , a "Portrait of a Man" byPhilippe de Champagne and two portraits of saints byZurbarán . The collection further contained two canvases by Murillo, three byGreuze , four by Ribera and one canvas and fouraquatint s byGoya , as well as a large collection of watercollours by Turner andDelacroix .The collection also comprised a considerable selection of oil paintings and drawings by
Salvator Rosa , an artist then virtually unknown in Portugal but one of the Count's favourite painters.An admirer of contemporary Portuguese painters, particularly of the Realist school that was then at the height of its popularity, the Count of Ameal also owned a large selection of canvases and drawings by
José Malhoa , Columbano andAntónio Silva Porto . Of the latter, he possessed the famous "The Boy and His Sheep", now in the Soares dos Reis Museum inPorto .Towards the end of his life, the Count came to assemble a large collection of gothic sculptutre and painting, as well as one of late-medieval and early-modern Portuguese religious painting (the latter chiefly purchased after the suppression of the property of the
religious orders by the Republicans in 1910).Another important part of the Count's collection was his selection of
Islamic faience , mostlyIberian and late-medieval.Upon the Count's death in 1920, his deeply-religious widow decided to sell most of the collection - probably because the family was starting to struggle with financial difficulties due to some of the Count's last and more costly purchases - as well as to donate the palace that housed it to a religious order. For that purpose, a major auction was hastily organized in July 1921, the biggest event of the kind in the history of auctioneering in Portugal. Both the
British Museum and theLouvre sent emissaries to the event, the latter having acquired a large amount of porcelain and most of the Count's collection of Islamic faience.Death and burial
.
It is possible that the building also contains an esoteric meaning, its crypts being arranged around a spiral stairwell reminiscent of the so called "pit of initiation" at the contemporary Regaleira estate, in
Sintra .The works on this monument were lead by sculptorCosta Mota Tio , who had been responsible for the revivalist reconstruction of the eastern wing of theJerónimos Monastery inLisbon .The pantheon is still in use by the Count's descendents today.
See also
*
João Ameal References
*Various authors, "Collections Comte de Ameal", Coimbra, 1921.
*Various authors, "Enciclopédia Luso-Brasileira", vol. 2, Lisboa, 1965.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.