Portrait of Charles I, after Van Dyck thumbnail 1
Portrait of Charles I, after Van Dyck thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level F , Case RMC, Shelf 8, Box L

Portrait of Charles I, after Van Dyck

Enamel Miniature
1825 (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This portrait is painted in enamel on metal. The advantage of enamel over traditional miniature painting (watercolour painted on vellum or, from about 1700, on ivory) is that it does not fade when exposed to light. The process of painting with enamels is, however, less free than the miniature technique and is fraught with danger. The first colours to be laid on the metal support have to be those needing the highest temperature when firing. More colour is added and the enamel refired, the process ending with the colours needing the lowest temperature. Such labour meant that it was an expensive option.

Enamel was first practised in England in the 1630s by the Swiss goldsmith Jean Petitot at the court of Charles I. It was reintroduced around 1680 by a Swede, Charles Boit, and achieved wide popularity with the work of Christian Friedrich Zincke of Germany. Both Boit and Zincke were goldsmiths by training. In the early 18th century a number of miniaturists took up enamel in order to offer their clients a choice. But as the market for all portraiture grew and as miniature painters worked on ivory with increasing confidence and bravura, enamel painters decided to learn their rivals’ art. In the 19th century the rich colour of enamel made it popular as a copyist’s art. This is a typical example of the taste for enamel copies. Like his father Henry Bone, Henry Pierce Bone made a successful living providing the public with such copies.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitlePortrait of Charles I, after Van Dyck (popular title)
Materials and techniques
Enamel on metal
Brief description
Portrait enamel of Charles I, after Van Dyck. Dated 1825, enamel on metal, painted by Henry Pierce Bone (1779-1855).
Physical description
Enamel miniature
Dimensions
  • Height: 148mm
  • Width: 117mm
Credit line
Transferred from the Museum of Practical Geology
Subject depicted
Summary
This portrait is painted in enamel on metal. The advantage of enamel over traditional miniature painting (watercolour painted on vellum or, from about 1700, on ivory) is that it does not fade when exposed to light. The process of painting with enamels is, however, less free than the miniature technique and is fraught with danger. The first colours to be laid on the metal support have to be those needing the highest temperature when firing. More colour is added and the enamel refired, the process ending with the colours needing the lowest temperature. Such labour meant that it was an expensive option.

Enamel was first practised in England in the 1630s by the Swiss goldsmith Jean Petitot at the court of Charles I. It was reintroduced around 1680 by a Swede, Charles Boit, and achieved wide popularity with the work of Christian Friedrich Zincke of Germany. Both Boit and Zincke were goldsmiths by training. In the early 18th century a number of miniaturists took up enamel in order to offer their clients a choice. But as the market for all portraiture grew and as miniature painters worked on ivory with increasing confidence and bravura, enamel painters decided to learn their rivals’ art. In the 19th century the rich colour of enamel made it popular as a copyist’s art. This is a typical example of the taste for enamel copies. Like his father Henry Bone, Henry Pierce Bone made a successful living providing the public with such copies.
Collection
Accession number
4871-1901

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Record createdJuly 10, 2003
Record URL
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