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Art Funded



The Adoration of the Kings

The Adoration of the Kings (© National Gallery, London)

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Jan Gossart (1478 - 1532)

National Gallery

1500 - 1515

This large painting was acquired with an Art Fund grant and a Government Treasury advance. It was probably painted as the altarpiece of the Lady Chapel at St Adrian's Grammont, near Brussels. The kneeling King, Caspar, is probably a portrait of Johannes de Broeder, who became abbot there in 1506 and may have commissioned the picture. Behind him stands Melchior with a retinue of attendants. Balthazar is on the left. Further back an onlooker, seen through a doorway, may be a self portrait of the artist. The dove, symbol of the Holy Spirit, descends to the infant Christ from the brilliant star in the sky, and angels approach from a great distance through a series of arches, giving the scene a spectacular sense of space and depth. Gossaert used the bright colour and highly detailed oil-painting technique of his 15th-century Netherlandish predecessors to sophisticated effect. The figures wear sumptuous costumes made of rich fabrics. The metalwork gifts presented by the Kings are elaborate and reflect current designs.

  • Medium: oil
  • Dimensions: 175 x 160 cm
  • Art Fund Grant: £10000 ( Total: £40,000)
  • ArtFunded in: 1911
  • Vendor: Dowager Countess of Carlisle

Provenance

Convent of Grammont, Belgium; Archduke Albert's Court Chapel in Brussels; Prince Charles of Lorraine, Governor of the Netherlands; Frederick, 5th Earl of Carlisle at Castle Howard.


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