Charles I (1600–1649), King of England 1629 Daniël Mijtens Dutch Born in Delft, Mijtens, or Mytens, had settled in London by 1618. He became court painter to James I in 1621 and also held the title under Charles I (1600-1649), until 1634, by which time Anthony van Dyck was reestablished in England. This is the prime, 1629 version of a standard full-length royal portrait type, with fine, detailed drapery painting and minor adjustments to various contours made by the artist. Listen to experts illuminate this artwork's story Listen Play or pause #402. The Mortlake Tapestry Works Supported by Bloo
Charles I (1600–1649), King of England 1629 Daniël Mijtens Dutch Born in Delft, Mijtens, or Mytens, had settled in London by 1618. He became court painter to James I in 1621 and also held the title under Charles I (1600-1649), until 1634, by which time Anthony van Dyck was reestablished in England. This is the prime, 1629 version of a standard full-length royal portrait type, with fine, detailed drapery painting and minor adjustments to various contours made by the artist. Listen to experts illuminate this artwork's story Listen Play or pause #402. The Mortlake Tapestry Works Supported by Bloomberg Philanthropies We're sorry, the transcript for this audio track is not available at this time. We are working to make it available as soon as Charles I (1600–1649), King of England. Daniël Mijtens (Dutch, Delft ca. 1590–1647/48 The Hague). 1629. Oil on canvas. Paintings
Size: 2894px × 4000px
Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
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