Old Masters Day Sale
Old Masters Day Sale
Equestrian Portrait of King William III (1650-1702), a battle beyond
Lot Closed
December 5, 02:42 PM GMT
Estimate
20,000 - 30,000 GBP
Lot Details
Description
Jan Wyck
Haarlem 1645 - 1700 Mortlake (near London)
Equestrian Portrait of King William III (1650-1702), a battle beyond
oil on canvas, held in an elaborate 18th century carved and gilt wood frame
unframed: 115 x 97 cm.; 45 x 38 1/4 in.
framed: 152 x 134.5 cm.; 59 7/8 x 53 in.
Wyck painted a number of equestrian portraits of King William III in the heat of battle, including at the Battle of the Boyne (a signed example is at Blenheim Palace) and at the Siege of Namur in 1697 (National Army Museum, London). In the grand tradition of Royal equestrian portraits, the artist depicts the King's charger en lavada, echoing Velázquez's portraits of Philip III and Philip IV of Spain on horseback (both Museo del Prado, Madrid) and Rubens' famous equestrian portrait of the Duke of Buckingham (destroyed 1949, though a sketch for the composition survives in the Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth).
Known as 'King Billy' in Ireland and Scotland, William III was the son of William II, Prince of Orange and his wife Mary, Princess Royal and Princess of Orange, the eldest daughter of King Charles I of England. In 1677 he married his cousin, Mary, daughter of the Duke of York, later King James II. Following The Glorious Revolution, when he and Mary launched an invasion of England and seized power from her increasingly unpopular father, William had to quell rebellion in Ireland, ultimately defeating the Jacobites at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690, and led troops on the Continent as part of the Grand Alliance throughout the Nine Years' War.