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Nicolas Lanier

Anthony van Dyck1628

Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien

Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien
Vienna, Austria

Nicolas Lanier (1588–1666) had been court musical director to Charles I since 1625 and was one of the agents the English king sent to Mantua in order to monitor the transport to London of the ducal collection he had acquired a short time earlier. The precious cargo was first brought to Antwerp, where the present portrait was probably painted. According to contemporary sources, Lanier spent seven days in van Dyck’s studio, sitting for the Flemish painter, who had returned from Italy only a short time earlier (1627). They possibly knew one another from van Dyck’s first short stay in England (1620/21). Lanier, his right arm self-confidently placed a kimbo, is clad in silken courtly attire. Covering his left shoulder and upper body, the black fabric of his cloak creates an impressive contrast to the red and white colour of his shirt; his right hand is hidden beneath it, while his left rests on the hilt of his sword. The narrow vista of an idyllic landscape extends the image towards the back. Lanier’s posture and expression are in keeping with sprezzatura, the “elegant nonchalance” typical of the ideal courtier, described by Baldassare Castiglione in his Book of the Courtier (Il Libro del Cortegiano, 1528) and especially cultivated at the Stuart court. In addition, van Dyck adopted a classical compositional type from Titian. He probably did so in the knowledge that Lanier would give the picture to the English king, who with the ducal collection of Mantua had just acquired one of the finest collections of Venetian paintings. Van Dyck’s tribute to Titian probably resulted in his being summoned again to the English court in 1632, where he would create a new type of English noble portrait that has retained its effectiveness to this day. © Cäcilia Bischoff, Masterpieces of the Picture Gallery. A Brief Guide to the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna 2010

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  • Title: Nicolas Lanier
  • Creator: Anton van Dyck
  • Creator Lifespan: 1599/1641
  • Creator Nationality: flemish
  • Creator Gender: male
  • Creator Death Place: London
  • Creator Birth Place: Antwerp
  • Date Created: 1628
  • Style: Flemish Baroque
  • Provenance: in the Gallery since 1720
  • Physical Dimensions: w876 x h1110 cm (without frame)
  • Inventory Number: GG 501
  • Artist Biography: The seventh of twelve children born to a wealthy silk merchant in Belgium, Anthony van Dyck began to paint at an early age. By the age of nineteen, he had become a teacher in Antwerp. Soon afterward, he collaborated and trained with the famous Flemish painter Peter Paul Rubens. In his early twenties, van Dyck went to Italy, where he studied the paintings of Titian and Paolo Veronese and worked as a successful portrait painter for the Italian nobility. He became so well known that King Charles I of England summoned him to London to be his exclusive court painter and eventually gave him a knighthood. Van Dyck's numerous portraits of Charles I and his family were greatly admired by his contemporaries. Realizing that Charles's political and financial fortunes were in decline, van Dyck left England for Antwerp and Paris. A year later, after several unsuccessful projects abroad, he returned to London in ill health and died shortly thereafter. Van Dyck is buried in Saint Paul's Cathedral, a distinction reserved only for illustrious British subjects. ©J. Paul Getty Trust
  • Type: paintings
  • External Link: http://www.khm.at/en/collections/picture-gallery
  • Medium: Oil on Canvas
Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien

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