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John Closterman
Portrait of a Gentleman, John Packer in Blue Coat with Diamonds, Oil Painting

circa 1686

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  • Portrait Lady in Russet Silk Dress c.1710, Michael Dahl, oil on canvas painting
    By (Circle of) Michael Dahl
    Located in London, GB
    This charming work is a good example of the type of portrait in vogue during the first quarter of the eighteenth century in Britain. The sitter, portrayed bust-length, wears a russet silk dress over a white chemise...
    Category

    18th Century Old Masters Portrait Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Oil

  • Portrait of a Lady, Katherine St Aubyn, Godolphin, Cornelius Johnson, Oil canvas
    By Cornelius Johnson
    Located in London, GB
    Titan Fine Art are pleased to present this charming bust-length portrait, which is a good example of the style of portrait painted in England in the second quarter of the seventeenth century. The attire consists of the finest silks, and the full billowing sleeves, bows, and hairstyle help in dating this portrait to circa 1637. The accessory par excellence – pearls – are worn as a necklace and were a very popular accessory. The artist makes no attempt to obey the rules of Baroque and instead sensitively depicts in complete honesty his sitter against a plain wall, and without distracting backdrops and flowing draperies – this work is very redolent of the sumptuous half-length female portraits that Cornelius Johnson...
    Category

    17th Century Old Masters Portrait Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Cotton Canvas, Oil

  • Portrait of a Young Gentleman, Pieter Van Der Dvssen; by Jan van Haensbergen
    By Jan Van Haensbergen
    Located in London, GB
    Portrait of a Young Gentleman, Pieter Van Der Dvssen c.1664 Jan van Haensbergen (1642–1705) This charming portrait is an excellent example of late 17th century child portraiture and is from one of the most prolific periods in art history – the Dutch Golden Age. A vast number of artists produced work to fulfil the demands and tastes of a broad Dutch society, and many cities in the Netherlands developed into distinct artistic centres, characterised by style and specialities of subject. The quality of our portrait is similar to the works of the highly specialised ‘fijnschilders’, who were working in Leiden at the time; these artists executed meticulous small-scale paintings. As with the artist’s other works of children, Haensbergen painstakingly recorded many details including a fine depiction of the face, and the surface effects of the materials and the pearl clasps. The young sitter is Walther Bernt Pieter Van der Dussen. He was born into a wealthy noble Catholic family in Delft in 1654. In this portrait he would be around ten years of age, dating the work to circa 1664, which is also the year before the artist’s marriage to Johanna van Heusden. The Van der Dussen family were great patrons of the arts and commissioned a number of major works from eminent artists in Delft & Amsterdam. Van der Dussen died in 1716. The wooded setting, the lamb, and the “picturesque” or “Roman” dress...
    Category

    17th Century Old Masters Portrait Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Oil

  • Portrait of a Lady in Silver Silk Dress & Pearls c.1660, Oil on canvas painting
    Located in London, GB
    This exquisite work is an accomplished example of the type of portrait in vogue in England during the third quarter of the 17th century. There was a large demand for paintings in England and the demand for portraits was greatest. Many artists worked in this lucrative field, even artists who initially trained in the more respected field of history painting, such as Peter Lely, turned their attention to portraiture to meet this demand. Moreover, it was not uncommon for the British, even for men, to present a gift of one’s portrait to a friend - portraits were first and foremost a memento. Woman at court often vied with one another in displays of rich and fashionable clothing. The drapery was either painted from the customer’s own clothes or was perhaps a creation using fabrics loosely tacked together in the studio. This was a common practice of Lely and his studio props included swathes of fabric and pieces of cloth. The sitter’s sumptuous attire and gauze scarf, fastened by a large diamond brooch, is of the finest material and is representative of wealth. Pearls were an obligatory accompaniment since at least the 1630s and they are worn in abundance – in her hair, on her attire, as a necklace, and as pear-shaped earrings called unions d’excellence, reflecting the difficulty of finding perfectly matched pearls of such large size. They could range up to 20 millimetres in diameter. Her hairstyle help date the painting to the early 1660’s. Peter Lely, the son of a Dutch...
    Category

    17th Century Old Masters Portrait Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Oil

  • Portrait of a Lady with Crimson Wrap & Fur c.1675 Fine Dutch Old Master Painting
    Located in London, GB
    This exquisite portrait, presented by Titan Fine Art, was painted in the era of London’s Great Fire - a young woman has been depicted wearing the most luxurious attire and a fortune ...
    Category

    17th Century Old Masters Portrait Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Oil

  • Portrait of Lady, Mary Sackville, Countess of Dorset, Studio of Godfrey Kneller
    By studio of Sir Godfrey Kneller
    Located in London, GB
    This striking portrait, presented by Titan Fine Art, depicts the celebrated seventeenth century court beauty, Mary Sackville (née Compton), Countess of Dorset (1669-1691) wearing a gold decollete dress and ermine-trimmed cloak. Painted circa 1690, its extravagant grand manner is distinctive of Kneller’s work from this period, where the use of full-length swaggering poses and a heightened sense of movement and physical presence were employed. Several versions exist particularly as she was a renowned court beauty. Images of well-known society individuals were in demand and the portrait studios thereby created several duplicates, and on occasion, many variations of them. One such example is a painting, signed by Kneller, at Knole Park in Kent, home of the sitter and her husband (see photo), and is an almost full duplicate of our painting. The Countess was Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Mary II and one of the Hampton Court Beauties, painted by Sir Godfrey Kneller for Queen Mary. Her father was James Compton, 3rd Earl of Northampton, and her mother was Mary Noel, daughter of Baptist Noel, 3rd Viscount Campden. In 1685 she married Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset and 1st Earl of Middlesex (died 1706) and the couple lived at their main residence Copt Hall, Waltham Abbey, Essex. In 1687 the couple’s only son, Lionel Cranfield Sackville, was born. He became, on his father’s death, seventh Earl of Dorset and later first Duke. As a child he was a favourite with the brusque and taciturn King (William). Charles and Mary also had one daughter, Lady Mary Sackville (1688 – 1705), who married Henry Somerset, 2nd Duke of Beaufort. Charles was born during the Civil War, and was the son of Richard Sackville, 5th Earl of Dorset (1622–1677) and Lady Frances Cranfield, sister and heiress of the 3rd Earl of Middlesex, to whose estates he succeeded in 1674, being created Baron Cranfield, of Cranfield in the County of Middlesex, and Earl of Middlesex in 1675. Three years later, on the death of his father in 1677, he became 6th Earl of Dorset and inherited Knole. Thus began the assembly at Copt Hall (and later, at Knole) of the outstanding collection of 17th-century furniture, textiles and portraits that compensated for the losses of the Civil War and that are now on public display. His first wife, Dowager Countess of Falmouth, died during childbirth, and two years later he went to France for his health embarked on a string of casual affairs and resisted pressure from his mother, Frances, to get married again - 'I doe pasionatly Long to see you fixte,' she wrote to him. Charles Sackville had benefited from his friendship with Charles II. In 1668 he had been made a Groom of the Bedchamber, and in 1669/70 he had been sent to France as ambassador to the Court of Louis XIV, but his real moment came in January 1689, when he supported the accession to the throne of King William II and his wife Queen Mary. As a reward, Charles was appointed Lord Chamberlain of the King's Household, in which capacity he supervised the domestic affairs of the monarch, ordering new keys for Queen Mary's apartments in Whitehall, ensuring that the Speaker...
    Category

    17th Century Old Masters Portrait Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Oil

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  • Portrait of Conrad Friedrich Hurlebusch, Early 18th Century Oil Painting
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  • 18th c. French Portrait of Princess of Bourbon as Hebe, Pierre Gobert, c. 1730
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