A previously
unknown painting by 17th Century master Van Dyck has been identified after
being spotted online.
The portrait was previously thought to have been a
copy and was in storage at the Bowes Museum in County Durham.
But it was photographed for a project to put all of
the UK's oil paintings on the BBC Your Paintings website, where it was seen by
an art historian.
After an investigation by BBC Two's Culture Show, it
has been verified by Van Dyck expert Dr Christopher Brown.
Dr Brown, director of the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford,
told The Culture Show that it was "a substantial discovery".
"It's quite clear that this is a late English
period Van Dyck," he said. "I don't think there's any doubt about
that. This absolutely is Van Dyck at his best."
Anthony Van Dyck, one of the finest portrait painters
of the 17th Century, was born in Antwerp and became court artist for King
Charles I in London in 1632.
The portrait depicts Olivia Boteler Porter,
lady-in-waiting to Charles I's wife Henrietta Maria.
The painting, which was not thought to be important
and in a bad condition, was covered in layers of dirt and varnish and was not
on display at the Bowes Museum.
But it was
photographed as part of the Public Catalogue Foundation's mission to document
every oil painting in public ownership and added to the BBC's Your Paintings
website, where it was spotted by art historian and dealer Dr Bendor Grosvenor.
"Although
as part of our national heritage values are irrelevant, for insurance purposes
it should now be valued at anything up to £1m," Dr Grosvenor said.
"Had it
appeared at auction as a copy, and in its dirty state, it would probably only
have been estimated at about £3,000-5,000."
Your Paintings:
A Culture Show Special will be broadcast on BBC Two at 18.30 GMT and can be
seen on the BBC iPlayer for a week after transmission.
Source: BBC
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