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A RARE PORTRAIT BY LUCAS HORENBOUT OFFERED FOR SALE IN PARIS
19 November 2014
Catégorie : MARKET

A rare miniature portrait on vellum painted around 1527 representing a theologian or a scholar attribued to Lucas Horenbout also called Hornebolte will be sold by the Binoche-Giquello group at the Paris Drouot salesrooms on November 26, 2014.


Considered as the main promoter of miniature painting in England during the reign of King Henry VIII, Horenbout reputedly taught this type of medium to Hans Holbein during the latter's first visit to London in 1526. On his return in 1532, Holbein painted some strikingly realistic miniatures of the king and members of his court which marked a considerable development of such art.

Measuring 5,8 cm in diameter, this miniature is surely among the first painted by England at the court of the king whose portrait was executed several times by Horenbout, an artist of Femish origin trained for the making of books of Hours by his father Gerard who had been much admired by Albrecht Dürer who had visited his studio in Antwerp in December 1521.

Horenbout settled in England in 1524 with his sister Susannah and his father and soon produced the king's portrait, firstly for letters of patent in a style much in tune with the illustrations of books of Hours.

Considered as a vibrant example of what historians call primitive miniatures, the portrait to be sold in Paris is much reminiscent of that representing the king's astronomer Nicholas Kratzer also painted on vellum laid on a playing card now in the collection of the University of Cambridge. The last miniature of that period, a portrait of King Henry VIII was sold in Paris in the mid 1990's, meaning that such works are quite rare on the art market. 

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