Double Take: Versions and Copies of Tudor Portraits at National Portrait Gallery

As reported in May, the Double Take exhibition, featuring portraits of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn opens today at the National Portrait Gallery.

The exhibition is free and will be on display in Room 2.

The National Portrait Gallery website says:

‘This display brings together five pairs of near identical portraits in order to explore how and why multiple versions and copies of portraits were made in the sixteenth century. Portraits of prominent Tudor sitters from the Gallery’s collection: Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn, Archbishop William Warham, the merchant Thomas Gresham and Lord Treasurer Thomas Sackville, are paired with portraits that have been generously loaned from other collections.

These portraits were produced to satisfy a demand for images of monarchs and prominent courtiers that often lasted long after the sitter’s death. Technical analysis undertaken as part of the Making Art in Tudor Britain project has used dendrochronology, infrared reflectography, x-radiography and photomicroscopy to explore the process by which these works were made and to discover which are contemporary versions of portraits, and which are later copies.’

From National Portrait Gallery

Further details – National Portrait Gallery

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