A Cavalry Engagement at a Bridge c. 1675
Oil on canvas | 107.3 x 140.8 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external) | RCIN 404700
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Adam-François van der Meulen trained in his native Brussels, learning the newly-emerging genre of battle painting under the tuition of Pieter Snayers (1592-1666/7). In 1664, having caught the eye of Jean-Baptiste Colbert (1619-1683), van der Meulen was summoned to Paris to enter the service of Louis XIV: he spent the next thirty years documenting the Sun King's military victories, often from the field of battle itself, and usually working in close collaboration with Charles Le Brun (1619-1690). He created a genre of spectacular reportage, with panoramic landscapes, picturesque incidents and ceremonial royal presence on the battle field.
The prestige of Louis XIV appealed to George IV (as to almost every other monarch during the 18th Century), but also meant that van der Meulen’s compositions were widely copied. Of the eighteen ‘Van der Meulens’ acquired by George IV (RCINs 404781, 406554, 406956, 403007, 404699-701, 405027, 405056-7, 405172, 405220, 406377, 406465, 406918, 406955 & 406957-8), only three (the first listed above) retain their original attribution. This composition is an adaptation of one signed and dated 1657, while Van der Meulen was still in Brussels (Prado); it appears to be by a talented contemporary imitator of his work.
A skirmish between two bodies of cavalry is conducted in the foreground, with horses and riders brought to the ground in the midst of the combat; a detachment of cavalry is fighting its way across a bridge in the distanceProvenance
Bought by George IV for 40 guineas at the sale of the Duke of York's pictures, 7th April, 1827; added to the inventory of Carlton House dated 1819 (no 603); in the Picture Gallery in Buckingham Palace in 1841 (no 31)
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Creator(s)
Acquirer(s)
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Medium and techniques
Oil on canvas
Measurements
107.3 x 140.8 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external)
139.0 x 173.6 x 7.7 cm (frame, external)