- Artist
- Sir Anthony Van Dyck 1599–1641
- Medium
- Oil paint on canvas
- Dimensions
- Support: 1065 × 833 mm
frame: 1173 × 952 × 72 mm - Collection
- Tate
- Acquisition
- Purchased with assistance from the Art Fund, Tate Members and the bequest of Alice Cooper Creed 2003
- Reference
- T07956
Summary
The sitter’s husband, Sir William Killigrew (1606-1695) was a courtier to Charles I, and also later a playwright. Sir William’s portrait by van Dyck, also dated 1638, was acquired by Tate in 2002 (Tate T07896). The present portrait of his wife was acquired from an entirely different source less than a year later. The two pictures were known to have been apart for at least the previous 150 years. The re-united works are now thought to be the only companion pair of husband-and-wife portraits from van Dyck’s English period in a British publicly owned collection.
William Killigrew was knighted by Charles I in May 1626 – probably shortly after his marriage to Mary Hill of Honiley, Warwickshire. Neither the dates of her birth nor her death are recorded. The couple were to have seven children in all. The circumstances in which van Dyck painted their portraits are unknown. As Royalists, the couple were forced by poverty to live apart during the Civil War and Commonwealth period. They were re-united at the Restoration of the Stuart monarchy in 1660, when Sir William regained his earlier court post and Lady Mary became dresser to the dowager queen Henrietta-Maria.
Lady Mary here gazes out at the viewer directly. By the late 1630s, van Dyck seems to have devised for his female portraits a less specifically fashionable form of dress. Clearly the prestige of being painted by him was such that his sitters were prepared to accept this. Lady Mary is shown in just such a gown – simplified, and minus the kind of richly textured lace that was so time-consuming to paint – and which has thus become a ‘timeless’ version of contemporary dress. The border of her shift appears just above the edge of her deep red gown, both pulled low. It is clear that van Dyck has absorbed ideas from Venetian painters. Titian’s Flora, of around 1515-20 (Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence) is, for instance, a comparable image of a beautiful woman, perhaps in the role of the classical goddess Venus, golden hair trailing across her cheek, cream shift barely covering her breast and shoulder, and roses held in one hand. Lady Mary, too, holds roses which, as attributes of Venus, are symbols appropriate to a happily married woman. Moreover, her position behind a stone parapet echoes other images by Titian, such as the portrait of ’La Schiavona’ (the Dalmatian woman) of around 1510-12 (National Gallery, London).
The inscription, lower left, 'My Lady. KILLIGR[E]W / van..Dyck 1638', resembles ones on images by van Dyck of other Killigrew family members, including the companion portrait of Lady Mary’s husband.
Van Dyck has had a greater impact on British portrait-painting than any other artist. He was born and trained in Antwerp and first visited England in 1620-21, before moving to Italy where he assimilated the works of Titian and other Venetian painters. In 1632 he returned to England and entered the service of Charles I, where he reinvented the visual imagery of the English court.
Further reading
Malcolm Rogers, 'Golden Houses for Shadows: Some Portraits of Thomas Killigrew and his Family', in ed. David Howarth, Art and Patronage at the Caroline Courts, Cambridge, 1993, pp.220-42
Karen Hearn, Sir Anthony van Dyck: Portrait of Sir William Killigrew, 1638, Tate, Patrons’ Papers 6, 2003.
Karen Hearn
August 2003
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