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#john de critz
history-of-fashion · 1 year
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ab. 1612 John de Critz - Anne of Denmark Queen of James VI & I
(Weiss Gallery, London)
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james-vi-stan-blog · 1 year
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James VI of Scotland and I of England, c.1605, attributed to John de Critz
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centuriespast · 2 years
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Anne of Denmark (1574–1619), Queen Consort of James I John de Critz the elder (1551/1552–1642) (attributed to) Colchester and Ipswich Museums Service: Ipswich Borough Council Collection
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pagansphinx · 7 months
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Robert Peake the Elder (English, 1551-1619)
Robert Peake was an English painter active in the later part of Elizabeth I's reign and for most of the reign of James I. In 1604, he was appointed picture maker to the heir to the throne, Prince Henry; and in 1607, serjeant-painter to King James I – a post he shared with John De Critz.
Henry Frederick (1594–1612), Prince of Wales, with Sir John Harington (1592–1614), in the Hunting Field • 1603 • The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
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Robert Peake the Elder, Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales, with Sir John Harington (Detail)
Peake was the only English-born painter of a group of four artists whose workshops were closely connected. The others were De Critz, Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, and the miniature painter Isaac Oliver. Between 1590 and about 1625, they specialised in brilliantly coloured, full-length "costume pieces" that are unique to England at this time. It is not always possible to attribute authorship between Peake, De Critz, Gheeraerts and their assistants with certainty.
Source: Wikipedia
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maudeboggins · 1 year
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Jacob Van Doort (Flemish, active 1606-1629). Princess Elizabeth of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel (1593-1650), later Duchess of Saxe-Altenberg, 1609. Oil on canvas
Fig. 6 - John de Critz the Elder (Flemish, 1551-1642). Anne of Denmark, ca. 1605-1610. Oil on canvas
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Frans Pourbus the Younger (Netherlandish, 1569-1622). Margherita Gonzaga, Princess of Mantua, 1606. Oil on canvas
Fig. 1 - Robert Peake (English, 1551-1619). Ann Vavasour, ca. 1600. 55.5 x 51. Guildford: National Trust, Hatchlands, 1166065_CC279. on loan
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Fig. 2 - Robert Peake the Elder (English, 1551-1619). Catherine Carey, Countess of Nottingham, 1597
Marcus Gheeraerts the younger (Flemish, 1561-1636). Dorothy, Lady Dormer
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cotehardie · 1 year
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hands in tudor and elizabethan portraiture
jane seymour (1536) - hans holbein the younger elizabeth i (1572) - nicholas hilliard mary i (1558) - hans eworth mary rogers, lady harington (1592) - marcus gheeraerts the younger lady margaret beaufort - unknown painter robert cecil (1602) - john de critz mary tudor, queen of england (1554) - antonis mor elizabeth i when a princess (1546) - william scots mary, queen of scots (1558) - françois clouet
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detournementsmineurs · 3 months
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Joyaux britannique "Miroir de Grande-Bretagne" dans le "Portrait de James VI" par John de Critz (1604) présenté par Léonard Pouy - L'Ecole des Arts Joailliers - lors des journées consacrées à “L'Ornement Précieux II” par L'Ecole des Arts Joailliers au Collège de France, janvier 2024.
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spanishbaroqueart · 5 years
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Formerly attributed to Juan Pantoja de la Cruz
The Somerset House Conference, 1604
National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London (BHC2787)
Detail: The Spanish and Flemish delegation
On the left is the delegation from Spain representing Philip III; in order from the window:
Juan Fernández de Velasco, 5th Duke of Frías, Constable of Castile, leader of the Austro/Flemish and Spanish delegation (although he was ill and did not attend the conference)
Juan de Tassis, 1st Count of Villamediana
Alessandro Robida, Senator of Milan
And then the delegation from the Spanish Netherlands representing Albert VII, Archduke of Austria:
Charles de Ligne, 2nd Prince of Arenberg
Jean Richardot, President of the Brussels Privy Council
Louis Verreyken, Audiencier of Brussels and Principal Secretary
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rubenista · 6 years
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Attributed to John De Critz, King James I of England (detail), 1605
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ravens-cove · 6 years
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Lady Mary Wroth painted by John de Critz
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toanunnery · 7 years
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Portrait of Anne of Denmark
John de Critz, 1605
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sartorialadventure · 3 years
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Renaissance fashions
1. Andrea Solario - Salome with the Head of Saint John the Baptist 2. Anne of Denmark by John de Critz, 1605 3. ARTEMISIA GENTILESCHI. Dame assise de trois-quarts 4. Amalia van Solms 5. Anna of Austria, Queen of Spain ( @twiceturned  the sleeves and front of this dress looks identical to the Jane Dormer one! the loops on the top of the sleeves are obviously NOT slashed and puffed, so you’re right, they MUST be ties of some kind!)​ 6. Anne of Austria, Queen of France from the workshop of Peter Paul Reubens, c. 1625 7. Anne of Austria, Queen of France by Peter Paul Rubens
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centuriespast · 3 years
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Sir Philip Sidney (1554–1586) John de Critz the elder (1551/1552–1642) Bolton Museum and Art Gallery
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the-historihen · 3 years
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it's a tits out kind of look
1) Anne of Denmark, ca. 1605-1610. John de Critz the Elder. National Portrait Gallery.
2) Lady Francis Fairfax, ca.1605–1615. Marcus Gheeraerts the younger. York Art Gallery.
3) Portrait of an Unknown Woman (once said to be Joyce Clopton), ca.1610. Marcus Gheeraerts the younger.
4) Anne of Denmark, ca. 1611-14. Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger.
5) Portrait of a Lady, ca. 1618. Marcus Gheeraerts the younger. Ferens Art Gallery.
6) Elizabeth Poulett, ca. 1616. Follower of Robert Peake. Denver Art Museum.
7) María de' Medici, Queen of France, ca. 1607. Frans Pourbus the Younger. Guggenheim Museum Bilbao.
8) Gertrude Sadler, Lady Aston, ca. 1620-23. Unknown Artist. The Tate.
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scotianostra · 2 years
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On December 12th 1574, Anne of Denmark, the wife of King James VI, was born.
Anne was the second child, and second girl, of Frederik the Second and his queen, Sophie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. The couple were initially married by proxy, which means on paper without them being present, and Anne was finding it difficult to make the journey across stormy seas, so James set about fetching her himself and upon reaching and presenting himself to her “in boots and all” and kissed her, in the Scottish fashion!
They were formally married the 23rd of November 1859 in Oslo before returning to Scotland. On the 17th of May she was crowned queen of Scotland. The ceremony lasted seven hours and , Anne’s dress was opened during it and “s "a bonny quantity of oil” was poured upon her breast and arm. James was at first infatuated by his bride, but later the couple often disagreed, though in the early years of their marriage, James seems always to have treated Anne with patience and affection.
Although Anne had been brought up in the Lutheran religion, she converted Roman Catholicism during the 1590s. In Basilikon Doron, written 1597-1598, James described marriage as “the greatest earthly felicitie or miserie, that can come to a man! Nothing changes with marriage through the centuries eh! lol Despite James’ alleged homosexual tendencies, for which there is no definitive proof, Anne gave birth to their first child, Henry Frederick Stuart on 19 February 1594. She was given no say in the care and upbringing of her son who on James insistence, was placed in the custody of John Erskine, Earl of Mar at Stirling Castle.
Distressed at this situation she mounted a campaign for custody of her son, which James resisted, leading to further friction between the couple. Prince Henry was followed by a daughter, Elizabeth Stuart in 1596, then Margaret in 1598, who died at fourteen months old, a second son, Charles, later Duke of York (and Charles I), was born at Dunfermline in 1600, Charles was at first a sickly child and it was not thought likely that he would survive. Then came Robert, Duke of Kyntyre, born in 1601, who died at the age of four months. She didn’t have it easy in childbiirth, after eventualy gaining custody of Henry she gave birth to a daughter, Mary in 1605 and later her last child, Sophia in 1607, both these children failed to survive to adulthood, Mary died at two years and Sophia at a day old. Mary and Sophia are buried at Westminster Abbey.
The infant mortality rate was high in the seventeenth century, a fact of life that not even royalty could elude. After narrowly surviving the birth and death of her last child, Sophia, in 1607, Anne’s decision to have no more children resulted in widening the gulf between the couple. Queen Anne died aged 44 on 2 March 1619, of a dangerous form of dropsy. An inquest discovered Anne to be "much wasted within, specially her liver”.
James did not attend his wife’s funeral, claiming illness, his symptoms, according to Sir Theodore de Mayerne, included “fainting, sighing, dread, incredible sadness…” Anne was buried in the south aisle of the Henry VII Chapel, Westminster Abbey, on 13 May 1619.
I do like the first pic of Anne, by Flemish artist Paul van Somer, dated 1617, just two years before her passing, the second is by John De Critz the Elder another  painter of Flemish origin and is dated 1605.
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detournementsmineurs · 3 months
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Joyaux britannique "Les Trois Frères" dans le "Portrait de James VI" par John de Critz (circa 1605) présenté par Léonard Pouy - L'Ecole des Arts Joailliers - lors des journées consacrées à “L'Ornement Précieux II” par L'Ecole des Arts Joailliers au Collège de France, janvier 2024.
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