Oil Portrait of King Henry VIII Following the Holbein Prototype
👑 Oil Portrait of King Henry VIII (1491–1547) Following the Prototype, Wearing the Badge of the Order of the Garter After Hans Holbein the Younger
English School circa 1750
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A refined Georgian antiquarian cabinet oil portrait masterpiece reinterpreting the most authoritative Tudor royal image — uniting Renaissance iconography with eighteenth-century historical revival. Small in scale yet rich in historical resonance, the painting reflects the enduring fascination with Tudor monarchy that shaped Georgian collecting culture and antiquarian scholarship.
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Subject & Medium 🎨
Oil on single chamfered oak panel
Panel: 15 cm × 15 cm
This mid-18th-century cabinet portrait depicts King Henry VIII in bust-length within a painted feigned oval, following the established likeness derived from the 1561 prototype after the now-lost 1537 Whitehall Palace mural by Hans Holbein the Younger.
Holbein’s Whitehall image established the canonical likeness of Henry VIII — a visual declaration of dynastic permanence and sovereign authority. Though the mural was destroyed in the Whitehall Palace fire of 1698, the composition survived through painted copies and engravings circulated widely across Europe. Over the centuries it became one of the most recognisable royal images in European history. The present work stands firmly within that enduring visual tradition.
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Composition & Technique 🖌️
Henry is presented frontally, slightly turned toward the viewer, with a composed and sovereign gaze. The painted oval operates as a medallion-like framing device, isolating the monarch against a dark ground and reinforcing both authority and cabinet intimacy.
The modelling reflects mid-18th-century antiquarian production:
• Controlled linear rendering of facial planes
• Restrained tonal transitions in flesh passages
• Simplified yet precise articulation of costume
• Balanced chromatic contrast between warm garment tones and a dark ground
The jewelled cap and feather plume are crisply defined, while highlights along the collar and insignia provide dimensional lift. Age-consistent craquelure across the surface reinforces authenticity without disrupting visual coherence.
The single chamfered oak panel is entirely consistent with Georgian cabinet construction.
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About the Sitter 👑
Henry VIII (1491–1547), King of England from 1509 to 1547, remains one of the most transformative monarchs in British history.
• Founder of the Church of England
• Central figure of the English Reformation
• Architect of Tudor dynastic power
He is shown wearing a simplified rendering of the badge of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, of which he was Sovereign.
In full Tudor state portraits Henry appears adorned with the elaborate Garter collar and the “Great George” pendant. In eighteenth-century engravings and painted derivatives, this insignia was often simplified into a radiating jewelled roundel with a pendant drop — precisely as seen here — affirming adherence to established royal iconography.
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Historical Significance 📜
Executed circa 1750, the work belongs to the Georgian antiquarian revival, when Britain turned intellectually toward its Tudor past.
Collectors sought historic royal portraits for display in:
Libraries
Gentleman’s studies
Country house interiors
Antiquarian cabinets
The engraver and antiquarian George Vertue (1684–1756) played a central role in standardising Tudor imagery through print culture. Through such engravings Holbein’s lost Whitehall mural became firmly embedded within the British imagination.
The painting therefore represents more than a likeness — it is an eighteenth-century act of dynastic remembrance.
An early German descriptive label on the reverse confirms later Continental ownership, demonstrating the cross-channel circulation of English royal imagery.
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About the Artist 🎨
English School, mid-18th century.
Unsigned, as typical for Georgian antiquarian cabinet portraits, the work displays:
• Engraving-derived compositional fidelity
• Linear modelling
• Oak panel cabinet execution
• Historical restraint rather than theatrical embellishment
Such works were produced within London’s antiquarian milieu for collectors who valued scholarship and national heritage.
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Signed ✍️
Unsigned, consistent with period cabinet production.
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Framed 🖼️
Presented in its original period 18th-century carved wooden gilt frame, contemporary with the panel.
The frame retains its original carved structure and has been recently overpainted in gilt. Visible age-related wear including losses, cracking, chips, and historic repairs are present — consistent with an authentic eighteenth-century frame.
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Size 📏
Panel: 15 cm × 15 cm
Framed: 35 cm × 35 cm × 7 cm depth
A jewel-like Tudor cabinet image within a commanding Georgian surround.
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Provenance 📚
Private German Collection (early descriptive label verso)
Sold: Gorringes Auctioneers, Sussex — Fine Art & Interiors
Curated by Cheshire Antiques Consultant LTD
Private Exhibition
The Antiquarian King: Henry VIII and the Georgian Revival of Tudor Portraiture
Famous Lord Hill Museum
The retained German label adds documentary depth and confirms historic Continental appreciation.
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Why You’ll Love It 💚
✅ Directly derived from the iconic Holbein Whitehall prototype — the definitive image of Henry VIII
✅ Authentic mid-18th-century Georgian antiquarian revival example
✅ Executed on a single chamfered oak panel consistent with period cabinet construction
✅ Retains its original 18th-century carved frame — increasingly rare and desirable
✅ Professionally conserved by Vanessa Andrew M.A., based at Williamson Art Gallery
✅ Exhibited in a curated Tudor revival museum exhibition
✅ Cross-collectible appeal — Tudor, Georgian, royal portraiture, and antiquarian scholarship
✅ Compact jewel-like scale paired with commanding architectural frame depth
✅ Documented Continental provenance enhancing historical narrative and collector confidence
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Condition Report 🔎
Professional Conservation
The painting underwent professional conservation treatment in January 2026 by Vanessa Andrew M.A., Fine Art Conservator based at Williamson Art Gallery.
Treatment included:
• Removal of surface dirt using 2% Tri-ammonium citrate in water
• Reduction and removal of aged varnish using propanol applied through Stoddard solvent
• Removal of historic overpaint during varnish reduction
• Filling of paint losses using Mowiol G4-88 and whiting
• Retouching with dry pigments dispersed in Paraloid B72
• Application of Paraloid B72 varnish layer
• Final protective MS2A varnish layer
Photographic documentation before, during, and after treatment is included within the conservation report.
The conservation restored tonal clarity and chromatic balance while preserving historic integrity.
Panel Condition
• Structurally stable single oak panel
• Age-consistent craquelure
• Historic losses professionally filled and retouched
• Paint surface stable with no active flaking
• No visible active splitting or panel movement
Frame Condition
• Original 18th-century carved wooden frame
• Structurally sound
• Visible age-related wear including gilt losses, surface cracking, small chips, and historic repairs
• Recently overpainted in gilt; carving remains intact beneath
A full digital copy of the January 2026 treatment report is available to serious collectors upon request.