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Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger

Marcus Gheeraerts (also written as Gerards or Geerards; c. 1561/62 – 19 January 1636) was a Flemish artist working at the Tudor court, described as "the most important artist of quality to work in England in large-scale between Eworth and van Dyck"[1] He was brought to England as a child by his father Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder, also a painter. He became a fashionable portraitist in the last decade of the reign of Elizabeth I under the patronage of her champion and pageant-master Sir Henry Lee. He introduced a new aesthetic in English court painting that captured the essence of a sitter through close observation. He became a favorite portraitist of James I's queen Anne of Denmark, but fell out of fashion in the late 1610s.

Engraving by Wenceslas Hollar, 1644, of a self-portrait of Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, 1627 (now lost).

Family

Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger (sometimes known as Mark Garrard[2]) was born in Bruges, the son of the artist Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder and his wife Johanna. Hardly anything is known of the paintings of the elder Gheeraerts, although his work as a printmaker was renowned in Europe.[3]

Like other Protestant artists from the Low Countries, Gheeraerts the Elder fled to England with his son to escape persecution in the Low Countries under the Duke of Alba. His wife was a Catholic and remained behind and is believed to have died a few years later. Father and son are recorded living with a Dutch servant in the London parish of St Mary Abchurch in 1568. On 9 September 1571, the elder Gheeraerts remarried. His new wife was Susanna de Critz, a member of an exiled family from Antwerp.[4]

It is not known by whom young Marcus was trained, although it is likely to have been his father. He was possibly also a pupil of Lucas de Heere. Records suggest that Marcus was active as a painter by 1586.[5] In 1590, he married Magdalena, the sister of his stepmother Susanna and of the painter John de Critz. The couple had six children, only two of whom seem to have survived—a son, Marcus III (c. 1602 – c. 1654), also a painter, and a son Henry (1604 – August 1650).[4] His half-sister Sara married the painter Isaac Oliver in 1602.[6]

Career

A new aesthetic

 
Unfinished portrait sketch of Sir Henry Lee, likely to have been from life; oil on canvas, c. 1600

The earliest signed works by Gheeraerts the Younger date from c. 1592, but Roy Strong identified a set of portraits of William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley dated to around 1586 as likely based on an original by Gheeraerts.[7] Although raised in England, Gheeraerts' work reflects a continental aesthetic very different from the flat modeling of features and pure, brilliant colours associated with Elizabethan artists such as Nicolas Hilliard. "The implications suggest that Oliver and Gheeraerts singly or together visited Antwerp in the late eighties and were influenced by the portrait style of Frans Pourbus."[1] From around 1590, Gheeraerts led a "revolution" in English portraiture.[8] For the first time in English art sitters were rendered in three dimensions, achieving a lifelike impression through tonality and shadow. New too were capturing the character of individual sitters through close observation and the use of sombre colour and greyed flesh tones.[8][9] Gheeraerts was one of the first English artists to paint on canvas rather than wood panel, allowing much larger pictures to be produced. He also introduced the full-length figure set out-out-of-doors in a naturalistic landscape for full-scale portraiture, a feature seen in portrait miniatures of the same era.[4][6][9]

The need for assistants to complete the backgrounds and details of the new large canvas paintings, and the numbers of surviving copies and variants of Gheeraerts' works, suggest a studio or workshop staffed with assistants and apprentices. There are similarities of features between Gheeraert's portraits of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex and miniatures of Essex by Gheeraerts' brother-in-law Isaac Oliver, and later between their portraits of Anne of Denmark, but it is unknown whether the two artists collaborated or shared patterns for portraits.[10]

Elizabethan success

 
Queen Elizabeth I, the Ditchley Portrait, c. 1592. Oil on canvas, National Portrait Gallery
 
Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex, 1596

Sir Henry Lee of Ditchley, who retired as Queen's Champion in the autumn of 1590, was the architect of much of the chivalric pageantry at the court of Elizabeth I. Lee became Gheeraerts' patron around 1590, and Gheeraerts quickly became fashionable in court circles,[7] creating emblematic portraits associated with the elaborate costumed iconography of Lee's Accession Day tilts. The queen likely sat to him for the Ditchley Portrait of 1592,[6][7] and her favourite the Earl of Essex employed Gheeraerts from 1596. The royal accounts for 1596–98 also include payments for decorative work by "Marcus Gerarde".[4] Another Gheeraerts portrait of Elizabeth is in the collection of Trinity College, Cambridge.[11]

The Ditchley Portrait seems to have always been at Lee's home in Oxfordshire, and was likely painted for (or commemorates) her two-day visit to Ditchley in 1592. In this image, the queen stands on a map of England, her feet on Oxfordshire. The painting has been trimmed and the background poorly repainted, so that the inscription and sonnet are incomplete. Storms rage behind her while the sun shines before her, and she wears a jewel in the form of a celestial or armillary sphere close to her left ear. The new portrait aesthetic did not please the aging queen, and in the many versions of this painting made with the allegorical items removed, likely in Gheeraerts' workshop, Elizabeth's features are "softened" from the stark realism of her face in the original. One of these was sent as a diplomatic gift to the Grand Duke of Tuscany and is now in the Palazzo Pitti.[12]

Around 1594, Gheeraerts painted a portrait of Lee's cousin Captain Thomas Lee standing in a landscape wearing Irish dress. The iconography of the portrait alludes to Captain Lee's service in Ireland.[13] Gheeraerts also painted several portraits of Sir Henry Lee himself, including a full-length portrait in his robes of the Order of the Garter (1602).[14]

Essex (whose mother Lettice Knollys, Countess of Leicester was related to Sir Henry Lee) seems to have used Gheeraerts exclusively for large-scale portraits from the mid-1590s. The first of these is the 1596 full-length portrait of Essex at Woburn Abbey, where he stands in a landscape with the burning Spanish city of Cadiz in the background. Many half-length and three-quarter-length portraits of Essex with plain backgrounds appear to be studio variants of sittings to Gheeraerts.[10] Like Lee, Essex was an important participant in the Accession Day tilts.

Sir Roy Strong wrote of the Ditchley and Woburn Abbey portraits:

Gheeraerts' success lay in his ability to subdue the bourgeois robustness of Flemish painting and fuse it with the melancholic, aristocratic, courtly fantasy of late Elizabethan England ... Elizabeth and Essex remain Gheeraerts' supreme works deserving to rank, along with some of Hilliard's portrait miniatures, as great masterpieces of early English painting.[15]

Gheeraerts' popularity does not seem to have been tainted by the patronage of participants in the Essex Rebellion (both Essex and Thomas Lee were executed for treason in 1602).[7]

Jacobean years

 
Anne of Denmark, 1611–1614, oil on canvas, Woburn Abbey[16]
 
Catherine Killigrew, Lady Jermyn, 1614.

Gheeraerts remained at the forefront of fashion in the years immediately following Elizabeth's death in 1603. James I's queen, Anne of Denmark, employed Gheerearts for large scale paintings and his brother-in-law Isaac Oliver for miniatures.[17] In 1611 Gheeraerts was paid for portraits of the king, queen, and Princess Elizabeth.[18] A portrait of Anne, likely wearing mourning for her son Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales in the winter of 1612-13 is also attributed to Gheeraerts.[18]

His 1611 portrait of Frances Howard, Countess of Hertford in rich attire framed by a draped silk curtain, with a fringed pelmet across the top of the canvas, is the first known instance of a portrait setting that would be used by Hilliard's former apprentice William Larkin in a series of full-length portraits between 1613 and 1618.[8][19] Overall, Gheeraerts' portraiture in the Jacobean era is characterized by the "quietness, pensiveness, and gentle charm of mood"[15] seen in his portraits of Catherine Killigrew, Lady Jermyn (1614) and Mary Throckmorton, Lady Scudamore (1615).

Isaac Oliver died in 1617, and around the same time Gheeraerts' position at court began to decline as the result of competition from a new generation of immigrants. Anne of Denmark died in 1619, and although Gheeraerts was part of her funeral procession as "Queen's Painter", the Netherlander Paul van Somer had likely displaced him as her chief portraitist some time before.[20] For the last twenty years of his life Gheeraerts was employed chiefly by the country gentry and by academic sitters.[21]

Gheeraerts was a member of the Court of the Painter-Stainers' Company in the 1620s and had an apprentice, Ferdinando Clifton, who was a freeman of the Company in 1627. Gheeraerts died on 19 January 1636.[22]

Gallery

Elizabethan

Jacobean

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Strong 1969, p. 22
  2. ^ Engraving in England in the sixteenth & seventeenth centuries: a descriptive catalogue with introductions, CUP, p. 104
  3. ^ The one known portrait by Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder is the 1586 Wanstead Portrait of Elizabeth I. Hearn 2003, p. 33.
  4. ^ a b c d Hearn 2003, pp. 11–14
  5. ^ A record differentiates "Marcus Geraerts (oude) schilder" (that is, the elder painter); Hearn 2003 p. 12
  6. ^ a b c Hearn 2001, p. 121
  7. ^ a b c d Strong 1969, pp. 269–71
  8. ^ a b c Strong 1993, p. 76
  9. ^ a b Hearn 1995, p. 177
  10. ^ a b Hearn 1995, p. 178
  11. ^ . BBC Your Paintings. Archived from the original on 19 November 2014.
  12. ^ Strong 1987, pp. 135–37.
  13. ^ Hearn 1995, p. 176
  14. ^ Hearn 2003, p. 18
  15. ^ a b Strong 1969, p. 23
  16. ^ Hearn 1995 lists this portrait as by Gheeraerts; Hearn 2003 calls it a studio copy of the signed three-quarter-length version in the Royal Collection, likely cut down from a full-length portrait.
  17. ^ Hearn 2003, p.34
  18. ^ a b Hearn 1995, p. 192
  19. ^ Hearn 2003, p. 37
  20. ^ Hearn 2003, p.35
  21. ^ Strong 1969, p. 24
  22. ^ Hayes 1992, p. 111
  23. ^ "Marcus The Younger Gheeraerts - Blanche parry". en.artsdot.com. from the original on 7 February 2019. Retrieved 11 February 2019.

References

  • Collins Baker, C. H. Lely and the Stuart Portrait Painters. 2 vols. London, 1912, 1:21–35.
  • Hayes, John. British Paintings of the Sixteenth through Nineteenth Centuries. The Collections of the National Gallery of Art Systematic Catalogue. Washington, D.C., 1992: 111.
  • Hearn, Karen, ed. Dynasties: Painting in Tudor and Jacobean England 1530–1630. New York, Rizzoli, 1995. ISBN 0-8478-1940-X.
  • Hearn Karen, "Insiders or outsiders? Overseas-born artists at the Jacobean court." In Randolph Vigne and Charles Littleton,From Strangers to Citizens: The Integration of Immigrant Communities in Britain, Ireland, and Colonial America, 1550–1750, Sussex Academic Press, 2001, ISBN 1-902210-86-7
  • Hearn, Karen, and Rica Jones, Marcus Gheeraerts II: Elizabethan Artist, London, Tate Gallery, 2003, ISBN 1-85437-443-5.
  • Millar, Sir Oliver. "Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger: A Sequel through Inscriptions." The Burlington Magazine 105 (1963): 533–541.
  • Poole, Mrs. Reginald Lane. "Marcus Gheeraerts, Father and Son, Painters." The Walpole Society 3 (1914): 1–8.
  • Strong, Roy, "Elizabethan Painting: An Approach through Inscriptions. III. Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger." The Burlington Magazine 105 (1963): 149–157.
  • Strong, Roy, The English Icon: Elizabethan and Jacobean Portraiture. London and New York City, 1969: 21–24, 269–304.
  • Strong, Roy, "The Surface of Reality: William Larkin", FMR No. 61, April 1993, Franco Maria Ricci Int., New York, ISSN 0747-6388.

External links

  • 95 artworks by or after Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger at the Art UK site

marcus, gheeraerts, younger, marcus, gheeraerts, also, written, gerards, geerards, 1561, january, 1636, flemish, artist, working, tudor, court, described, most, important, artist, quality, work, england, large, scale, between, eworth, dyck, brought, england, c. Marcus Gheeraerts also written as Gerards or Geerards c 1561 62 19 January 1636 was a Flemish artist working at the Tudor court described as the most important artist of quality to work in England in large scale between Eworth and van Dyck 1 He was brought to England as a child by his father Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder also a painter He became a fashionable portraitist in the last decade of the reign of Elizabeth I under the patronage of her champion and pageant master Sir Henry Lee He introduced a new aesthetic in English court painting that captured the essence of a sitter through close observation He became a favorite portraitist of James I s queen Anne of Denmark but fell out of fashion in the late 1610s Engraving by Wenceslas Hollar 1644 of a self portrait of Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger 1627 now lost Contents 1 Family 2 Career 2 1 A new aesthetic 2 2 Elizabethan success 2 3 Jacobean years 3 Gallery 3 1 Elizabethan 3 2 Jacobean 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksFamily EditMarcus Gheeraerts the Younger sometimes known as Mark Garrard 2 was born in Bruges the son of the artist Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder and his wife Johanna Hardly anything is known of the paintings of the elder Gheeraerts although his work as a printmaker was renowned in Europe 3 Like other Protestant artists from the Low Countries Gheeraerts the Elder fled to England with his son to escape persecution in the Low Countries under the Duke of Alba His wife was a Catholic and remained behind and is believed to have died a few years later Father and son are recorded living with a Dutch servant in the London parish of St Mary Abchurch in 1568 On 9 September 1571 the elder Gheeraerts remarried His new wife was Susanna de Critz a member of an exiled family from Antwerp 4 It is not known by whom young Marcus was trained although it is likely to have been his father He was possibly also a pupil of Lucas de Heere Records suggest that Marcus was active as a painter by 1586 5 In 1590 he married Magdalena the sister of his stepmother Susanna and of the painter John de Critz The couple had six children only two of whom seem to have survived a son Marcus III c 1602 c 1654 also a painter and a son Henry 1604 August 1650 4 His half sister Sara married the painter Isaac Oliver in 1602 6 Career EditA new aesthetic Edit Unfinished portrait sketch of Sir Henry Lee likely to have been from life oil on canvas c 1600 The earliest signed works by Gheeraerts the Younger date from c 1592 but Roy Strong identified a set of portraits of William Cecil 1st Baron Burghley dated to around 1586 as likely based on an original by Gheeraerts 7 Although raised in England Gheeraerts work reflects a continental aesthetic very different from the flat modeling of features and pure brilliant colours associated with Elizabethan artists such as Nicolas Hilliard The implications suggest that Oliver and Gheeraerts singly or together visited Antwerp in the late eighties and were influenced by the portrait style of Frans Pourbus 1 From around 1590 Gheeraerts led a revolution in English portraiture 8 For the first time in English art sitters were rendered in three dimensions achieving a lifelike impression through tonality and shadow New too were capturing the character of individual sitters through close observation and the use of sombre colour and greyed flesh tones 8 9 Gheeraerts was one of the first English artists to paint on canvas rather than wood panel allowing much larger pictures to be produced He also introduced the full length figure set out out of doors in a naturalistic landscape for full scale portraiture a feature seen in portrait miniatures of the same era 4 6 9 The need for assistants to complete the backgrounds and details of the new large canvas paintings and the numbers of surviving copies and variants of Gheeraerts works suggest a studio or workshop staffed with assistants and apprentices There are similarities of features between Gheeraert s portraits of Robert Devereux 2nd Earl of Essex and miniatures of Essex by Gheeraerts brother in law Isaac Oliver and later between their portraits of Anne of Denmark but it is unknown whether the two artists collaborated or shared patterns for portraits 10 Elizabethan success Edit Queen Elizabeth I the Ditchley Portrait c 1592 Oil on canvas National Portrait Gallery Robert Devereux Earl of Essex 1596 Sir Henry Lee of Ditchley who retired as Queen s Champion in the autumn of 1590 was the architect of much of the chivalric pageantry at the court of Elizabeth I Lee became Gheeraerts patron around 1590 and Gheeraerts quickly became fashionable in court circles 7 creating emblematic portraits associated with the elaborate costumed iconography of Lee s Accession Day tilts The queen likely sat to him for the Ditchley Portrait of 1592 6 7 and her favourite the Earl of Essex employed Gheeraerts from 1596 The royal accounts for 1596 98 also include payments for decorative work by Marcus Gerarde 4 Another Gheeraerts portrait of Elizabeth is in the collection of Trinity College Cambridge 11 The Ditchley Portrait seems to have always been at Lee s home in Oxfordshire and was likely painted for or commemorates her two day visit to Ditchley in 1592 In this image the queen stands on a map of England her feet on Oxfordshire The painting has been trimmed and the background poorly repainted so that the inscription and sonnet are incomplete Storms rage behind her while the sun shines before her and she wears a jewel in the form of a celestial or armillary sphere close to her left ear The new portrait aesthetic did not please the aging queen and in the many versions of this painting made with the allegorical items removed likely in Gheeraerts workshop Elizabeth s features are softened from the stark realism of her face in the original One of these was sent as a diplomatic gift to the Grand Duke of Tuscany and is now in the Palazzo Pitti 12 Around 1594 Gheeraerts painted a portrait of Lee s cousin Captain Thomas Lee standing in a landscape wearing Irish dress The iconography of the portrait alludes to Captain Lee s service in Ireland 13 Gheeraerts also painted several portraits of Sir Henry Lee himself including a full length portrait in his robes of the Order of the Garter 1602 14 Essex whose mother Lettice Knollys Countess of Leicester was related to Sir Henry Lee seems to have used Gheeraerts exclusively for large scale portraits from the mid 1590s The first of these is the 1596 full length portrait of Essex at Woburn Abbey where he stands in a landscape with the burning Spanish city of Cadiz in the background Many half length and three quarter length portraits of Essex with plain backgrounds appear to be studio variants of sittings to Gheeraerts 10 Like Lee Essex was an important participant in the Accession Day tilts Sir Roy Strong wrote of the Ditchley and Woburn Abbey portraits Gheeraerts success lay in his ability to subdue the bourgeois robustness of Flemish painting and fuse it with the melancholic aristocratic courtly fantasy of late Elizabethan England Elizabeth and Essex remain Gheeraerts supreme works deserving to rank along with some of Hilliard s portrait miniatures as great masterpieces of early English painting 15 Gheeraerts popularity does not seem to have been tainted by the patronage of participants in the Essex Rebellion both Essex and Thomas Lee were executed for treason in 1602 7 Jacobean years Edit Anne of Denmark 1611 1614 oil on canvas Woburn Abbey 16 Catherine Killigrew Lady Jermyn 1614 Gheeraerts remained at the forefront of fashion in the years immediately following Elizabeth s death in 1603 James I s queen Anne of Denmark employed Gheerearts for large scale paintings and his brother in law Isaac Oliver for miniatures 17 In 1611 Gheeraerts was paid for portraits of the king queen and Princess Elizabeth 18 A portrait of Anne likely wearing mourning for her son Henry Frederick Prince of Wales in the winter of 1612 13 is also attributed to Gheeraerts 18 His 1611 portrait of Frances Howard Countess of Hertford in rich attire framed by a draped silk curtain with a fringed pelmet across the top of the canvas is the first known instance of a portrait setting that would be used by Hilliard s former apprentice William Larkin in a series of full length portraits between 1613 and 1618 8 19 Overall Gheeraerts portraiture in the Jacobean era is characterized by the quietness pensiveness and gentle charm of mood 15 seen in his portraits of Catherine Killigrew Lady Jermyn 1614 and Mary Throckmorton Lady Scudamore 1615 Isaac Oliver died in 1617 and around the same time Gheeraerts position at court began to decline as the result of competition from a new generation of immigrants Anne of Denmark died in 1619 and although Gheeraerts was part of her funeral procession as Queen s Painter the Netherlander Paul van Somer had likely displaced him as her chief portraitist some time before 20 For the last twenty years of his life Gheeraerts was employed chiefly by the country gentry and by academic sitters 21 Gheeraerts was a member of the Court of the Painter Stainers Company in the 1620s and had an apprentice Ferdinando Clifton who was a freeman of the Company in 1627 Gheeraerts died on 19 January 1636 22 Gallery EditElizabethan Edit Portrait of William Cecil 1st Baron Burghley after 1585 oil on panel attributed to Gheeraerts National Portrait Gallery London Sir Francis Drake 1591 Softened portrait of Elizabeth I Gheeraerts studio Palazzo Pitti Florence Called Mary Rogers Lady Harington 1592 oil on panel Portrait of an Unknown Woman 1590 1600 Oil on canvas Royal Collection Hampton Court long thought to have been a pregnant Queen Elizabeth I owing to the frame having a plaquard saying Queen Elizabeth it is now believed to have been a swapped frame Captain Thomas Lee oil on canvas 1594 Portrait of an Unknown Lady c 1595 possibly Lettice Knollys Countess of Leicester Robert Devereux Earl of Essex Gheeraerts studio c 1596 Anne Lady Pope with her children 1596 National Portrait Gallery London Robert Devereux 2nd Earl of Essex in Garter robes c 1597 National Portrait Gallery LondonJacobean Edit Portrait of a Boy Aged 2 1608 Compton Verney Frances Howard Countess of Hertford 1611 oil on canvas Anne of Denmark in Mourning possibly for her son Henry Frederick Prince of Wales c 1612 Tom Durie Anne of Denmark s fool 1614 oil on panel National Galleries of Scotland Mary Throckmorton Lady Scudamore 1615 oil on panel National Portrait Gallery London Portrait of a Woman in Red 1620 oil on canvas Tate Blanche Parry 23 Margaret Laton c 1620 Victoria and Albert Museum Anne Hale Mrs Hoskins 1629 oil on panel Susanna Temple sister of James Temple 1621 oil on canvas sold 2000See also EditArtists of the Tudor court Portraiture of Elizabeth I of EnglandNotes Edit a b Strong 1969 p 22 Engraving in England in the sixteenth amp seventeenth centuries a descriptive catalogue with introductions CUP p 104 The one known portrait by Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder is the 1586 Wanstead Portrait of Elizabeth I Hearn 2003 p 33 a b c d Hearn 2003 pp 11 14 A record differentiates Marcus Geraerts oude schilder that is the elder painter Hearn 2003 p 12 a b c Hearn 2001 p 121 a b c d Strong 1969 pp 269 71 a b c Strong 1993 p 76 a b Hearn 1995 p 177 a b Hearn 1995 p 178 Trinity College University of Cambridge BBC Your Paintings Archived from the original on 19 November 2014 Strong 1987 pp 135 37 Hearn 1995 p 176 Hearn 2003 p 18 a b Strong 1969 p 23 Hearn 1995 lists this portrait as by Gheeraerts Hearn 2003 calls it a studio copy of the signed three quarter length version in the Royal Collection likely cut down from a full length portrait Hearn 2003 p 34 a b Hearn 1995 p 192 Hearn 2003 p 37 Hearn 2003 p 35 Strong 1969 p 24 Hayes 1992 p 111 Marcus The Younger Gheeraerts Blanche parry en artsdot com Archived from the original on 7 February 2019 Retrieved 11 February 2019 References EditCollins Baker C H Lely and the Stuart Portrait Painters 2 vols London 1912 1 21 35 Hayes John British Paintings of the Sixteenth through Nineteenth Centuries The Collections of the National Gallery of Art Systematic Catalogue Washington D C 1992 111 Hearn Karen ed Dynasties Painting in Tudor and Jacobean England 1530 1630 New York Rizzoli 1995 ISBN 0 8478 1940 X Hearn Karen Insiders or outsiders Overseas born artists at the Jacobean court In Randolph Vigne and Charles Littleton From Strangers to Citizens The Integration of Immigrant Communities in Britain Ireland and Colonial America 1550 1750 Sussex Academic Press 2001 ISBN 1 902210 86 7 Hearn Karen and Rica Jones Marcus Gheeraerts II Elizabethan Artist London Tate Gallery 2003 ISBN 1 85437 443 5 Millar Sir Oliver Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger A Sequel through Inscriptions The Burlington Magazine 105 1963 533 541 Poole Mrs Reginald Lane Marcus Gheeraerts Father and Son Painters The Walpole Society 3 1914 1 8 Strong Roy Elizabethan Painting An Approach through Inscriptions III Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger The Burlington Magazine 105 1963 149 157 Strong Roy The English Icon Elizabethan and Jacobean Portraiture London and New York City 1969 21 24 269 304 Strong Roy The Surface of Reality William Larkin FMR No 61 April 1993 Franco Maria Ricci Int New York ISSN 0747 6388 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger 95 artworks by or after Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger at the Art UK site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger amp oldid 1099619931, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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