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At the beginning of the seventeenth century, Jan van Ravesteyn was one of the most important portrait painters in The Hague. He painted a series of twenty-five officers’ portraits, all in the same layout, with the men depicted from the hips upwards and wearing armour. Their helmets are decorated with orange plumes, referring to the commander-in-chief of the army, Prince Maurits of Orange. The series of portraits comes from one of the Orange family’s palaces in The Hague.

Details

  • Title: Portrait of an Officer
  • Creator: Ravesteyn, Jan Anthonisz van
  • Date Created: 1612
  • Physical Dimensions: h114.5 cm x w97.5 cm
  • Provenance: Honselaarsdijk Palace, Naaldwijk, in or before 1694; Nationale Konst-Gallery, The Hague, 1804-1805; Nationaal Kabinet (Royal Museum), ‘Besoigne-Kamer’ (the Business Affairs Room) and Picture Gallery of Prince William V, The Hague, 1805-1821; transferred, 1822
  • Type: Painting
  • Medium: Oil on canvas

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