Charles I in Three Positions
Triple Portrait of Charles I | |
Artist | Anthony van Dyck |
---|---|
Year | 1635–1636 |
Subject | The portraits of King Charles I of England. |
Dimensions | 99.4 cm × 84.4 cm (39.1 in × 33.2 in) |
Location | Windsor Castle, Windsor, Berkshire |
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Owner | Royal Collection |
Accession | RCIN 404420 |
Charles I in Three Positions, also known as the Triple Portrait of Charles I, is an oil painting of Charles I of England painted 1635–1636[1] by the Flemish artist Sir Anthony van Dyck, showing the king from three viewpoints: left full profile, face on, and right three-quarter profile. It is currently part of the Royal Collection.[2]
The colours of the costumes and pattern of the lace collars are different in each portrait, though the blue riband of the Order of the Garter is present in all three.[2] The painting was probably begun in the latter part of 1635, and was sent to Rome in 1636 to be used as a reference work for the Italian sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini to create a marble bust of Charles I.[3] Bernini famously exclaimed, upon seeing the painting, it was "the portrait of a doomed man".[citation needed] Pope Urban VIII sent the bust to Charles's queen Henrietta Maria in 1638 in the hope of encouraging a reconciliation of the Roman Catholic Church with the Church of England.[4]
The bust was presented in 1637 and admired for its workmanship and likeness to the king. Charles rewarded Bernini with a valuable diamond ring. Queen Henrietta Maria commissioned Bernini to make a companion bust of her, but the English Civil War intervened and it was never made. The bust of Charles was sold at the end of the English Civil War but recovered for the Royal Collection on the Restoration, only to be destroyed by a fire in Whitehall Palace in January 1698.[2]
The painting remained in the possession of Bernini and his heirs in the Bernini Palace on the Via del Corso until c. 1802, when it was sold to British art dealer William Buchanan and returned to England. It was exhibited at the British Gallery in 1821. It was acquired for the Royal Collection in 1822.[3]
It is thought that the painting was influenced by Lorenzo Lotto's Triple Portrait of a Goldsmith, c. 1530, then in the Royal Collection.[2] In its turn, Van Dyck's portrait of Charles I may have influenced Philippe de Champaigne's Triple portrait of Cardinal de Richelieu, c. 1642.
Many copies of the work were made, possibly by supporters of the royal House of Stuart, including one created around 1750 and now in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.[5]
The British Museum has an engraving which was believed to depict the bust before it was destroyed, with baroque locks of flowing hair, fine lace collar, garter sash, possibly by Robert van Voerst, but now believed to show a bust by François Dieussart.
The painting currently hangs in the Queen's Drawing room at Windsor Castle.[3]
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Lorenzo Lotto - Triple Portrait of a Goldsmith.jpg
Triple Portrait of a Goldsmith, Lorenzo Lotto, c. 1530, Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
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Triple Portrait of Cardinal de Richelieu, Philippe de Champaigne, c. 1642, National Gallery, London
See also
References
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External links
- Notes on Pictures in the Royal Collections – XIII. The Triple Portrait of Charles I by van Dyck, and the Bust by Bernini, Lionel Cust, The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs, Vol. 14, No. 72 (Mar., 1909), pp. 337–341
- Robert van Voerst, Portrait bust of Charles I, an engraving, British Museum
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- Portraits by Anthony van Dyck
- Charles I of England in art
- 1636 paintings
- 17th-century portraits
- Portraits of men
- Portraits of the British Royal Family
- Paintings in the Royal Collection of the United Kingdom
- Paintings in Windsor Castle
- Pope Urban VIII
- England–Holy See relations
- 17th-century painting stubs