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Catherine of Aragon, by an Unknown artist, oil on panel, c. 1520, L246. By permission of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Church Commissioners.

Henry and Catherine Reunited

The recent conservation of a rare early portrait of Catherine of Aragon, which is on long-term loan from Lambeth Palace, has presented the Gallery with the opportunity to display portraits of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon together as a pendant ‘pair’. The two works, from around the same date, are of a similar scale with a similar green damask background, and it is likely that they are both examples of portrait ‘types’ that would have been placed together in this way, nearly five hundred years ago.…

By Charlotte Bolland, Project Curator (Making Art in Tudor Britain)

  • 3 Comments

30 January 2013

  • Exhibitions
  • Tudor & Elizabethan

How might a Victorian gentleman go about asking for a better salary? One approach was by writing an extremely tactful letter.

Today there are over 200 members of staff at the Gallery but Sir George Scharf its first Director, was something of a one man band. Appointed in 1857, his role was all encompassing. He fulfilled the roles of Visitor Services Assistant, Building Officer, Curator, Accountant, Librarian, Cataloguer and Researcher. Scharf also travelled extensively, sketching potential acquisitions and creating hundreds of sketchbooks filled with images of portraits, collections, people and places.…

By Bryony Millan, Archivist

  • 0 Comments

23 January 2013

  • Victorian & Edwardian
John Donne, by an Unknown English artist, oil on panel, circa 1595, NPG 6790

John Donne back on display

Following painstaking conservation treatment the portrait of John Donne is now back on display in Room 2 at the Gallery. The melancholy poet has emerged, not from the shadows that make this painting so distinctive, but rather from behind the layers of discoloured varnish and mismatched overpaint that obscured the surface. The subtle variations in colour and tone in the oval background have been recovered and now create an illusion of space behind the sitter. Unfortunately, no further letters of the inscription on the left-hand side were revealed during treatment, as the area of old loss lies along the panel joint. Restoration has taken place in several areas including the outline of the shoulder and arm, which was previously only approximately positioned from a past treatment campaign, and is now as the artist intended. Donne’s doublet was also revealed to be a far richer red colour, made by applying red lake over a dark underlayer. Recovering more of the original colour scheme has made the costume much more coherent and, given the sitter’s close attention to his pose and costume when commissioning this work, brought the painting closer to Donne’s original vision.…

By Charlotte Bolland, Project Curator (Making Art in Tudor Britain)

  • 1 Comment

22 January 2013

  • Conservation
Sir Francis Walsingham, by an Unknown artist, oil on panel, late sixteenth century, NPG 1704

Under the skin – A newly discovered piece of satirical Tudor art?

Technical analysis of paintings can occasionally yield some unexpected results, none more so than the discovery of other images hidden beneath the surface. As part of the Making Art in Tudor Britain project a small portrait of Sir Francis Walsingham came into the Gallery’s conservation studio to be examined as a ‘reserve’. We weren’t expecting to spend much time on it, but simply to examine it using infrared photography and possibly to carry out an x-ray. However, when the infrared photograph revealed two shadowy forms beneath the skin in the sitter’s face it became apparent that this was a very unusual painting. The x-ray showed that the figure on the right was a seated woman with loose long hair, and possibly a child in her arms. Very surprisingly, particularly in the context of a portrait, we seemed to have found a small devotional image that featured the Virgin and Child.…

By Charlotte Bolland, Project Curator (Making Art in Tudor Britain)

  • 1 Comment

9 January 2013

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