In a major four-part series, Andrew Graham-Dixon explores the
history of the Royal Collection, the dazzling collection of art and
decorative objects owned by the Queen. Containing over a million items,
this is one of the
largest art collections in the world - its masterpieces by Van Dyck,
Holbein, Leonardo da Vinci, Vermeer and Canaletto line the walls of
Windsor Castle, Hampton Court and many other palaces, museums and
institutions around Britain.
Andrew
argues that on the surface, the Royal Collection projects permanence,
but within these objects are stories of calamity, artistic passions and
reinvention. Their collecting shows how these kings and queens wielded
power, but it also reveals their personalities - it's through their
individual passions that we see them at their most human.
In
this first episode, Andrew marvels at the works acquired by the great
founders of the modern Royal Collection - Henry VIII and Charles I.
Henry VIII deployed the most essential rule of royal collecting, that
great art projects great power. Andrew decodes The Story of Abraham
series of tapestries in Hampton Court Palace's Great Hall, explaining
how these luxury artworks contain a simple message for his terrified
court - obedience.
But Henry also presided over
the first great age of the portrait in England; his painter, Hans
Holbein the Younger, was a magician who stopped time, preserving the
faces of Henry's court forever. Andrew visits the Royal Collection's set
of over 80 Holbein drawings in Windsor Castle's print room to see how
the artist helped the English to understand themselves in a new way.
Henry
VIII tried to overwhelm with magnificence, but for Charles I art was a
way to compete with other kings through taste. He was our first
connoisseur-king and the greatest royal collector in British history. It
was a fateful journey to Spain to win the hand of a Spanish princess
that opened Charles's eyes to the works of Titian and Raphael. But his
transformation into a world-class collector was sealed with the
wholesale purchase of the enormous art collection of the impoverished
Mantuan court. The greatest of the Mantuan treasures were Mantegna's
nine-picture series of The Triumphs of Caesar that Charles installed at
Hampton Court. They are themselves a visual depiction of how power - and
art - passes from the weak to the strong. Charles was top dog for now -
but for how long?
Andrew explores how Charles
I's Royal Collection introduced a new artistic language to British art.
The sensuality of Titian and the epic canvases of Tintoretto, still in
the Royal Collection today, were a revelation for a country whose visual
culture had been obliterated by the Reformation. And we see how Sir
Anthony van Dyck created a glamorous new style for the king that could
have served as a new beginning for British art. But this was a future
that would never happen - the English Civil War and Charles I's
execution put an end to this first great age of royal collecting, with
the king's artworks sold in 'the most extravagant royal car-boot sale in
history'.
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