John Luttrell (painting)

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Sir John Luttrell
ArtistHans Eworth
Year1550
TypeOil painting
OwnerCourtauld Institute of Art

Sir John Luttrell is an allegorical oil painting of a Tudor soldier.

Details

Sir John Luttrell was an English soldier, diplomat, and courtier under Henry VIII and Edward VI. The Flemish artist Hans Eworth produced a portrait of him in 1550, noted for its use of allegorical images. The painting shows John shaking his fist at a woman carrying an olive branch, while a ship founders on a stormy sea in the background. The painting is thought to represent John's anger at the peace treaty of 1550 between England and France; the ship is probably the Mary of Hamburg, which served under John during one of his Scottish campaigns.[1] Historian Oliver Garnett considers the painting to be "one of the most unusual and puzzling of all Tudor images".[1]

The painting is now owned by the Courtauld Institute of Art in London; a copy, made in 1591, hangs at Dunster Castle in Somerset.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Garnett, p.9.

Bibliography

  • Garnett, Oliver. (2003) Dunster Castle, Somerset.London: The National Trust. ISBN 978-1-84359-049-1.