Paradise Regained
In the year 1660, something miraculous began to happen. After
the execution of Charles I, the Royal Collection had been sold off and
scattered to the four winds. But now, with the restoration of Charles
II, the monarchy was
back. And with it their driven, sometimes obsessive, passion for art.
Slowly but surely, new pieces were acquired, as others were returned out
of fear of reprisal. The Royal Collection had sprung back to life.
Andrew
Graham-Dixon tells the story of the Royal Collection's remarkable
resurrection, following its fortunes from Charles II through to the 18th
century and the enlightened purchases of George III. This is when some
of the Queen's greatest treasures were collected - a magnificent
silver-gilt salt cellar in the form of castle, kept in the Tower of
London, a gold state coach, adorned with cherubs and tritons, and
masterpieces by Vermeer, Canaletto and Leonardo da Vinci.
Andrew
discovers the extraordinary peace offerings given to the 30-year-old
Charles II by fearful citizens, because they had backed the
Parliamentarians in the Civil War. And then there are works given by
other countries, hoping to curry favour with the restored monarch -
Holland gave sculptures, a yacht, a bed and a collection of paintings
worth nearly £30 million in today's money, including two magnificent
masterpieces by Titian that are still in the Collection.
At
Windsor Castle, Andrew reveals Charles II's life of extravagance - this
was a king who dined in public, as if he was a god, in an attempt to
rival France's Louis XIV, the Sun King. His palace walls were hung with
paintings of beautiful young women, the 'Windsor Beauties'. Even
Charles's furniture speaks of excess - tables and mirrors completely
covered in silver.
But Charles was also a king
who bought wisely and Andrew is astonished by the recent discoveries of
Royal Collection Trust conservators. Blank pages from Leonardo da
Vinci's notebooks (most likely acquired in Charles II's reign) come
alive under ultraviolet light, revealing drawings unseen for centuries.
Andrew
shows how the Collection grew during the 18th century, despite
philistine kings like George II ('I hate painting', he once shouted in
his German accent). Under George III, royal collecting soared to new
heights, driven by the new king's enlightened curiosity in the wider
world and his desire to understand how it worked. Andrew travels to
Venice to tell the story of one of the greatest purchases in the Royal
Collection's history - as a young king, George III paid £20,000 to
Canaletto's agent Consul Joseph Smith for a superb collection including
over 50 paintings by the Venetian master.
George
III, like Charles II, would be feted with gifts including the
Padshahnama - an illustrated Indian chronicle of the Mughal emperor,
Shah Jahan (famous for commissioning the Taj Mahal). Andrew discovers
the incredible painting, so delicate that it was, legend tells us,
painted with brushes made with hairs taken from the necks of baby
kittens. Because of his restless curiosity, by the end of his reign
George III had overseen some of the greatest acquisitions in the Royal
Collection's history.
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