After over a decade of austere Cromwellian rule, the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 led to a resurgence of the arts in England. The court of King Charles II ((1630-85) became the centre for the patronage of leading artists and the collecting of great works of art, which served a) as decoration for the royal apartments and b) to glorify the restored monarchy and reinforce Charles’ position as the rightful king. Now an exhibition called Charles II: Art and Power at the Queen’s Gallery is on at Buckingham Palace, until 13th May 2018.
In May 1660 Charles II made his triumphant return to the thrones of England and Ireland, ending a decade of republican Commonwealth under Oliver Cromwell. After 14 years in exile, Charles II was keenly aware of the importance of princely tradition and magnificent display in enforcing his right to the throne and his position as Head of the Church.
He ordered royal regalia and crown jewels to replace those sold off or melted down by the Parliamentarians, and his coronation in April 1661 was the most extravagant since that of Elizabeth I. See the stunning altar plate in Westminster Abbey, including the silver-gilt alms dish by Henry Greenway, a metre in diameter, and a solid-gold chalice and gold paten.
Charles planned to regain legitimacy, amongst other ways, by re-claiming his father’s fabulous art collection. Although the royal residences had survived the Civil War largely undisturbed, the Commonwealth government had sold off much of their contents. Parliament commanded that all persons holding goods formerly belonging to Charles I, Queen Henrietta Maria or the new king were to return them with immediate effect. This order was later made legally binding through the 1660 Act of Indemnity and Oblivion.
Charles II had placed an order for a large group of paintings from the dealer who had sold works to his father in the 1630s. Among these were Pieter Bruegel the Elder's The Massacre of the Innocents c1565–67 and Georges de la Tour's St Jerome c1621–3. In the same year the King was presented with great paintings, sculpture and furniture by the States of Holland and West Friesland. And, to strengthen the alliance between the two countries and to discourage Charles II from agreeing to a treaty with his cousin Louis XIV, they sent Paolo Veronese's Mystic Marriage of St Catherine of Alexandria c1562–69 and Titian’s Madonna and Child in a Landscape with Tobias and the Angel c1535–40.
Having grown up surrounded by his father’s art collection, Charles II knew that paintings promoted pleasure and decoration, and also promoted the king’s power. Soon after his return to England, he appointed the portraitist Sir Peter Lely as official Limner and Picture Drawer. Lely was seen as the natural successor to Van Dyck, the first holder of the post established by Charles I. The miniaturist Samuel Cooper became Royal Picture Maker in 1672. In 1674 Italian Antonio Verrio, who had assisted the artist Charles Le Brun at Versailles, was commissioned to decorate the newly built State Apartments at Windsor Castle.
The two great groups of drawings (by Hans Holbein II and Leonardo da Vinci) that came to King Charles came from Thomas Howard 14th Earl of Arundel, the first significant English collector of drawings. They were gifted in thanks for the restitution of the noble family’s lands.
Charles II's new court style was influenced by the luxurious French fashions he had seen at Louis XIV’s court when his exile started. His royal apartments at Whitehall Palace were filled with elaborate decorative arts, including tapestries woven in Parisian workshops and silver furniture in the French taste. The royal palaces were the setting for lavish masques and balls attended by poets, writers, scientists, actors and beautiful women, several of whom were painted by Sir Peter Lely in a series of Windsor Beauties, including portraits of the King's mistress Barbara Villiers, Countess of Castlemaine and Cleveland.
An image of the restored monarchy was painted by John Michael Wright in c1661. The King wore St Edward’s crown and parliamentary robes over the Garter costume, and he carried an orb and sceptre which were made specially for the. as the earlier regalia had been destroyed during the Interregnum. The King is seated in front of a tapestry apparently representing the Judgment of Solomon, which may allude to the king’s wisdom.
The gallery is displaying artefacts from the King’s Touch Ceremony in which each monarch touched tens of thousands of members of the public suffering from scrofula. God would cure the unsightly swelling disease VIA the Royal touch. The weekly ritual had become so popular that the palace was compelled to issue tokens to tens of thousands of scrofula sufferers, proving they had been blessed by the King’s hand. See the 1662 “Proclamation for the better ordering of those who repair to the Court for their Cure of the Disease called the Kings-Evil”.
In May 1660 Charles II made his triumphant return to the thrones of England and Ireland, ending a decade of republican Commonwealth under Oliver Cromwell. After 14 years in exile, Charles II was keenly aware of the importance of princely tradition and magnificent display in enforcing his right to the throne and his position as Head of the Church.
He ordered royal regalia and crown jewels to replace those sold off or melted down by the Parliamentarians, and his coronation in April 1661 was the most extravagant since that of Elizabeth I. See the stunning altar plate in Westminster Abbey, including the silver-gilt alms dish by Henry Greenway, a metre in diameter, and a solid-gold chalice and gold paten.
Charles planned to regain legitimacy, amongst other ways, by re-claiming his father’s fabulous art collection. Although the royal residences had survived the Civil War largely undisturbed, the Commonwealth government had sold off much of their contents. Parliament commanded that all persons holding goods formerly belonging to Charles I, Queen Henrietta Maria or the new king were to return them with immediate effect. This order was later made legally binding through the 1660 Act of Indemnity and Oblivion.
King Charles II
by John Michael Wright in c1661
282 × 239 cm
Barbara Villiers, Countess of Castlemaine and Cleveland, by John Michael Wright in c1661
282 × 239 cm
by Peter Lely
Charles II had placed an order for a large group of paintings from the dealer who had sold works to his father in the 1630s. Among these were Pieter Bruegel the Elder's The Massacre of the Innocents c1565–67 and Georges de la Tour's St Jerome c1621–3. In the same year the King was presented with great paintings, sculpture and furniture by the States of Holland and West Friesland. And, to strengthen the alliance between the two countries and to discourage Charles II from agreeing to a treaty with his cousin Louis XIV, they sent Paolo Veronese's Mystic Marriage of St Catherine of Alexandria c1562–69 and Titian’s Madonna and Child in a Landscape with Tobias and the Angel c1535–40.
Having grown up surrounded by his father’s art collection, Charles II knew that paintings promoted pleasure and decoration, and also promoted the king’s power. Soon after his return to England, he appointed the portraitist Sir Peter Lely as official Limner and Picture Drawer. Lely was seen as the natural successor to Van Dyck, the first holder of the post established by Charles I. The miniaturist Samuel Cooper became Royal Picture Maker in 1672. In 1674 Italian Antonio Verrio, who had assisted the artist Charles Le Brun at Versailles, was commissioned to decorate the newly built State Apartments at Windsor Castle.
Charles II's new court style was influenced by the luxurious French fashions he had seen at Louis XIV’s court when his exile started. His royal apartments at Whitehall Palace were filled with elaborate decorative arts, including tapestries woven in Parisian workshops and silver furniture in the French taste. The royal palaces were the setting for lavish masques and balls attended by poets, writers, scientists, actors and beautiful women, several of whom were painted by Sir Peter Lely in a series of Windsor Beauties, including portraits of the King's mistress Barbara Villiers, Countess of Castlemaine and Cleveland.
An image of the restored monarchy was painted by John Michael Wright in c1661. The King wore St Edward’s crown and parliamentary robes over the Garter costume, and he carried an orb and sceptre which were made specially for the. as the earlier regalia had been destroyed during the Interregnum. The King is seated in front of a tapestry apparently representing the Judgment of Solomon, which may allude to the king’s wisdom.
The gallery is displaying artefacts from the King’s Touch Ceremony in which each monarch touched tens of thousands of members of the public suffering from scrofula. God would cure the unsightly swelling disease VIA the Royal touch. The weekly ritual had become so popular that the palace was compelled to issue tokens to tens of thousands of scrofula sufferers, proving they had been blessed by the King’s hand. See the 1662 “Proclamation for the better ordering of those who repair to the Court for their Cure of the Disease called the Kings-Evil”.
silver-gilt alms dish by Henry Greenway, 1660
embossed with The Last Supper and the royal Stuart armsWestminster Abbey
The exhibition also shows how the king used science to build his reputation, countering the traditional view of Charles II as the Merrie Monarch who loved women, pleasure, parties, horse racing, yachting and theatre. Clearly patronage of these popular pastimes was a sure way to gain the support of the country, and to enjoy himself. By contrast, science was a source of intellectual fascination for Charles II, a tool for improving the navy and military, and a way of identifying himself with other powerful European princely patrons of science. In 1660 he founded the Royal Society which included other great scientific minds like astronomer Edmund Halley, who worked from the newly established Royal Observatory in Greenwich. And Isaac Newton.
The book Charles II: Art & Power by Martin Clayton and Rufus Bird was published by Royal Collection Trust in Dec 2017. It includes glittering silver-gilt plate from the high-altar of Westminster Abbey during the King's coronation, old master paintings, tapestries and spectacular furniture i.e the rich material world of Charles II's court.
The book Charles II: Art & Power by Martin Clayton and Rufus Bird was published by Royal Collection Trust in Dec 2017. It includes glittering silver-gilt plate from the high-altar of Westminster Abbey during the King's coronation, old master paintings, tapestries and spectacular furniture i.e the rich material world of Charles II's court.