To view all current artworks for sale visit philipmould.com

The years from 1675 to the early 1690s represent perhaps the only period in Kneller’s career when he may have felt threatened by rivals. Even after the death of Sir Peter Lely in 1680 he was in competition with John Michael Wright, John Riley, John Closterman and Willem Wissing, all of them accomplished and versatile painters.

Kneller’s portraits of this date are shining demonstrations of his talent, and none is a more virtuoso demonstration of his talent than the present example. It employs a pose based on Lely’s Portrait of the 2nd Earl of Carnarvon, but the intensity of characterisation is entirely Kneller’s own - the sitter’s torso is brought forward from the vertical, leaning to engage the spectator more intently, the right hand is dropped further to clutch the draperies tighter and the open background is reduced to a narrow glimpse of landscape shut in by foliage....





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To view all current artworks for sale visit philipmould.com

The years from 1675 to the early 1690s represent perhaps the only period in Kneller’s career when he may have felt threatened by rivals. Even after the death of Sir Peter Lely in 1680 he was in competition with John Michael Wright, John Riley, John Closterman and Willem Wissing, all of them accomplished and versatile painters.

Kneller’s portraits of this date are shining demonstrations of his talent, and none is a more virtuoso demonstration of his talent than the present example. It employs a pose based on Lely’s Portrait of the 2nd Earl of Carnarvon, but the intensity of characterisation is entirely Kneller’s own - the sitter’s torso is brought forward from the vertical, leaning to engage the spectator more intently, the right hand is dropped further to clutch the draperies tighter and the open background is reduced to a narrow glimpse of landscape shut in by foliage. The effect is to intensify our sense of the sitter’s presence in which we must engage with a formidable intelligence, and feel the power of the sitter’s wit as if coiled about to strike.

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500 Years of British Art