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Endymion Porter

Image credit: Tate

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Notes

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Endymion Porter was a favourite courtier of King Charles I, for whom he bought works of art. He is shown here as a huntsman with his kill, a possible reference to the ongoing civil war. His patronage of the arts is indicated by the statue of Apollo and the classical frieze he is leaning on. William Dobson painted this portrait at the exiled court of King Charles in Oxford. The pose is taken from a portrait of the Roman Emperor Vespasian by Titian, which was then in Charles I’s collection. Porter was later forced into exile in France, and his art collection was seized.

Tate Britain

London

Title

Endymion Porter

Date

c.1642–5

Medium

Oil on canvas

Measurements

H 149.9 x W 127 cm

Accession number

N01249

Acquisition method

Purchased 1888

Work type

Painting

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Tate Britain

Millbank, London, Greater London SW1P 4RG England

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