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  2. Masquerade ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masquerade_ball

    A standard item of masquerade dress was a "Vandyke", improvised on the costumes worn in the portraits of Van Dyck: Gainsborough's Blue Boy is the most familiar example, and a reminder of the later 18th-century popularity in England for portraits in fancy dress.

  3. List of paintings by Anthony van Dyck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_paintings_by...

    Between 1613 and 1632, van Dyck travelled all over Europe – from his native Antwerp (where he began working as a painter, initially under Hendrick van Balen and later with Peter Paul Rubens), to England for a brief stay at the court of James I and then to Italy, where he had the chance to get to know the old masters.

  4. Portrait of Queen Henrietta Maria, as St Catherine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait_of_Queen...

    The portrait of Queen Henrietta Maria, as St. Catherine of Alexandria was painted by van Dyck around 1639. She is depicted in a red dress, wearing a coronet and holding a wheel representing the wheel used to torture St Catherine of Alexandria. There are numerous copies of the portrait, one of which was sold at Bonhams for £9,000 in October ...

  5. Anthony van Dyck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_van_Dyck

    A confusing number of different pigments used in painting have been called "Vandyke brown" (mostly in English-language sources). Some predate van Dyck, and it is not clear that he used any of them. [39] Van Dyke brown is an early photographic printing process using such a colour. When van Dyck was knighted in 1632, he anglicized his name to ...

  6. The Three Eldest Children of Charles I (Royal Collection)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Three_Eldest_Children...

    In 1635 Van Dyck had painted a portrait of the same three children, which was intended to be sent to the Queen's sister Christina, in exchange for portraits of the Duchess's children. However, the King was angry with Van Dyck for showing Prince Charles wearing skirts, worn only by younger children, so the artist painted a second group portrait ...

  7. 1650–1700 in Western fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1650–1700_in_Western_fashion

    Gordenker, Emilie E.S.: Van Dyck and the Representation of Dress in Seventeenth-Century Portraiture, Brepols, 2001, ISBN 978-2-503-50880-1; Payne, Blanche: History of Costume from the Ancient Egyptians to the Twentieth Century, Harper & Row, 1965. No ISBN for this edition; ASIN B0006BMNFS

  8. Portrait of Sir Robert Shirley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait_of_Sir_Robert_Shirley

    The Portrait of Sir Robert Shirley is a painting by Sir Anthony van Dyck, a Flemish Baroque artist. [1] It is a portrait of Sir Robert Shirley (c. 1581 – 13 July 1628), the ambassador to the Safavid Shah Abbas (r. 1588–1629), beginning in 1608. [2]

  9. Devonshire House Ball of 1897 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devonshire_House_Ball_of_1897

    Lady Evelyn Cavendish (later Duchess of Devonshire), who attended in the dress of a Lady at the Court of the Empress Maria Theresa, while her husband, who later became the 9th Duke of Devonshire, dressed in sixteenth-century costume. [13] Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn and Princess Louise Margaret of Prussia, the Duchess of ...

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