
Sir Anthony van Dyck
Portrait of a Lady in a black dress, c. 1625
Oil on canvas
26 x 21 inches (66 x 53.5 cm)
Philip Mould & Co.
To view all current artworks for sale visit philipmould.com This portrait shows one of Van Dyck’s most attractive Italian period sitters. Although it was long known as a Van Dyck,...
To view all current artworks for sale visit philipmould.com
As is often the case with Van Dyck’s Italian period paintings, which are generally thinly painted on a coarse canvas over a single layer of ground preparation, the portrait had long ago been subjected to a campaign of excessive restoration. Restoration ‘over-kill’ has often happened throughout history, and this rescued portrait makes a graphic illustration: instead of partly leaving the thinned areas of the drapery, a restorer, possibly in the early part of last century, decided to give her an entirely new dress. Despite the delicacy and impact of a first class Van Dyck head, the picture was therefore demoted by the Denver Museum of Art in the United States, and sold by them through Christies in New York. Conservation by Philip Mould Ltd has now removed the added dress and the awkward over-paint in the face, and although somewhat sketchy in appearance, it has resumed an honest, and far more convincing Van Dyckian appearance in which the artist’s imprint can be read comprehensively throughout.
Provenance
2nd Lord Meadowbrook;from whom purchased by John Jackson, R.A.;
with Agnew's, London;
Julius Böhler, Munich;
from whom purchased by Count Alessandro Contini-Bonacossi, Florence, 1924;
Reinhardt, New York, 1927;
Senator and Mrs. Simon Guggenheim, New York, by 1931, by whom gifted to the Denver Art Museum, 1962; de-accessioned 27th January 2010, Christie’s New York, lot 325, sale no. 2282 as ‘attributed to Van Dyck’.