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  • I'm part the way through the retouching, the restoration of the painting and that

  • entails retouching of the actual losses. Fortunately for a painting this size

  • there aren't that many losses. As you can see here there's these pale grey losses

  • which are largely around the edges and across the join. However there is a great

  • deal of abrasion caused by previous over-cleanings, probably in the 18th or early

  • 19th centuries. I've started retouching at the top in the trees and you can now

  • see this effect of the canopy the foliage creates over Charles's head and

  • I've also retouched a bit at the bottom edge and I'm now working on the

  • sky, I'm nearly finished retouching that area and this was a particularly damaged

  • area. As you can see in this after-cleaning photograph here where a lot of

  • this blue colour, particularly here, had been worn away to the grey priming, so

  • this is a grey priming here, so all that blue paint has been removed in much of

  • this area and I'm trying to put something back there that doesn't look

  • too solid and is a bit modulated in the way you've got these sort of bright

  • blue striations against sort of paler streaks in the sky and once I've

  • completed the sky I'll then move down to the foliage just below Charles's

  • shoulder and then I'll start retouching the foreground to reestablish these

  • planes that go back in space towards the horizon. The loss across the seam in the

  • middle will be fairly straightforward to retouch. It does look quite obtrusive

  • with that pale grey filling in. Once that's retouched, as you can see on the

  • left of the painting across the sky where it's been retouched, it'll be

  • fairly invisible. That sort of retouching will be fairly straightforward.

  • What isn't straightforward Charles's thigh which looks rather

  • withered and thin. There is some paint that has been worn away there. As you can

  • see here there's a section of rivets for the armour here so this should be darker

  • here and this butterfly shape would have been a piece of metal attached to the

  • armour of the knee so that needs reestablishing. The thigh would have sat

  • in a groove in the saddle so here you have the saddle here which isn't very

  • well defined and this is the two outer edges of the saddle and the thigh

  • sits in that groove and Van Dyck has left this really quite sketchy and it's very

  • difficult to know how finished he intended that area to be and there are

  • certain other areas like he's left dribbles of paint, you can see here,

  • coming down over the horse which it would have been partially painted out

  • later on but would have been left visible. And so to the sort of pentiments

  • for the drawing of the horse's legs have been painted out a little bit

  • but have been deliberately left visible to give the idea of spontaneity

  • and a lack of finish. I expect the restoration of the painting will be

  • finished in about sort of four to five months time so it should go back on show

  • in the early summer.

  • Well, as you can see, the restoration of the painting is almost finished. I'm now

  • just finishing off parts of the horse. I've nearly completed this rear section,

  • the legs are pretty much finished as is the neck and head above the central join.

  • There are some areas like here, the belly, where you can see that where Van Dyck

  • made an initial drawing for the contour the underside of the stomach

  • which he painted out and that paint has been removed partially during a previous

  • cleaning in the 18th or early 19th centuries. So this piece of drawing has

  • to be suppressed and then there's further abrasion down here which needs

  • to be addressed. In the rest of the horse the damages are quite discreet: these

  • small losses here and across the join and there's quite a lot of paint that's

  • been over cleaned from part of the harness. This leather strap here, it's

  • largely the black paint which has been taken off. And once that's being

  • completed we will then discuss the painting with the curator Bart Cornelis

  • to make final adjustments into the restoration. As you can see the

  • foreground is really quite sketchy and that's deliberately so, I mean Van Dyck

  • deliberately left it looking quite unfinished so that you can see all these

  • sort of pentiments for the horse's legs. There's more drawing here which you

  • can see which he would have deliberately left partially visible and that

  • contrasts quite greatly with the horse which is much more finished in, you

  • know, giving the impression of a nice sleek smooth texture of the horse's coat

  • and the highly defined kind of musculature. There is a certain amount of

  • greyness to the foreground that wouldn't have been intended entirely by Van Dyck:

  • he mixed in a colour called smalt which is a cobalt-based pigment which

  • would have been finely ground and acts as a dryer; it makes the oil paint dry more

  • quickly but the downside of using that colour is that, on aging, it reacts with

  • the oil paint and forms a sort of blanched greyish looking colour and

  • there's very little you can do about that in the restoration, you have to

  • accept that. Other areas that have been finished are the sky, the blue skies, and

  • Charles's leg which was a bit of a problem because that had lost a lot of

  • the black paint in the groove here in the saddle which made his leg

  • look rather thin and withered. There's still a little bit more to do but once

  • that's finished which will be sometime within about a month or so the painting

  • will then go into a new frame and then in a couple of months will then go back on show in the Galleries.

  • Well we're standing here in front of the finished treatment really of Van Dyck's

  • 'Equestrian Portrait of Charles I' which looks absolutely smashing

  • after it's been restored and just as it is quite astonishing how Van Dyck

  • himself has painted such a large canvas. I mean it's always a mark of a great

  • painter if they know how to paint such an enormous canvas and still get all the

  • tonalities right, you know, know where everything is, plan such a thing,

  • that's not an easy thing to do and I suppose likewise it's not

  • actually that easy to do the same in a way once you start

  • restoring it because you have to make sure that once you've done something

  • there, it does not knock out what else is there,

  • you know, things like that. I suppose, in a way, that Van Dyck himself

  • would have had to think about that. Anyway I think it looks

  • absolutely wonderful and perhaps you can tell us something about what happened?

  • - Well I think, I mean, I was just really following Van Dyck during the

  • restoration. I mean I think I found some problems really is when you're

  • working up on a ladder or at height, you can't really step back and judge

  • what you've done and I think Van Dyck would have had the same problem when he

  • would have painted this, probably on a wooden scaffolding. I think the main

  • areas of restoration that are worthy of note are really the

  • sky: this patch of blue in the upper left which was very badly worn and

  • had become quite discoloured in the previous restoration, the previous

  • retouchings had discoloured and the varnish had discoloured quite noticeably

  • in that area so I think that's improved quite a bit. And again with the

  • foreground you now get a better reading of the distance from the immediate

  • foreground going into the middle distance. - It's amazing how this is opened

  • up, isn't it because this was actually really quite difficult to read,

  • this whole area in foreground which now makes sense and you

  • really feel that you are there, as it were, in that space. I think that's a

  • great improvement to what was there before. - And I think in in restoring

  • this area I've been very conscious to leave

  • the painting look as if it was as unfinished as Van Dyck probably intended

  • it to be so leaving areas of pentiments like for these horse's hooves and

  • the legs here and so on and these sort of half resolved shapes of the rocks in

  • this foreground and similarly here the other area of Charles's thigh and the

  • saddle cloth and saddle which were all quite badly worn and on top of that

  • there's a pigment here, indigo, which has faded so it's very difficult to work out

  • exactly what had happened to that area so it required really quite a minimal

  • amount of restoration to stop this thigh looking very thin and emaciated and to

  • reestablish something at the shape of this side of the saddle and the back of

  • the saddle. - Because that was quite difficult to read wasn't it?

  • Where exactly his leg was sitting? That's now much clearer, how the saddle actually works as

  • a saddle. - This leg kind of sits in a groove in the saddle which wasn't

  • really apparent before.

  • It was actually quite amazing how it's in such

  • a good condition, the painting. Really overall you think of it's a large

  • painting and once the varnish had been taken off and you

  • could see where the damages were...I almost thought if you were

  • to reduce that to a small painting, it would be actually in an incredible

  • condition. I mean, of course, there was lots in the sky that

  • you had to deal with and things like that where previous cleaning had done some

  • damage a long time ago and there's the join in the

  • canvas which was very visible but really on the whole actually

  • in remarkably good condition. - Well it is really for its size and the fact that

  • it travelled around so much in Europe early on, rolled up and travelled

  • by horse and cart and so on, that the actual damages to it

  • were actually very small,apart from the edges where there was a bit

  • more damage but the main problem really was the abrasion caused by the previous

  • cleaning. There weren't that many surprises during the course of the restoration

  • because the painting has been examined quite a number of times before and it's been

  • restored here in 1952. So if there were any surprises they would have been

  • discovered then. I think the thing that surprised me really when we got close up

  • to it was how cursorily areas of the painting are painted like the trees

  • which are painted very much like a scene painting for the theatre:

  • close up they just look like splotches of paint but when you go to a proper

  • viewing distance they immediately look very three-dimensional, forming this

  • canopy over Charles's head.

  • - One of the great joys also of a treatment like

  • this is that you can think about the frame of the picture and now that the

  • picture looks so good we can make it look even better by putting a more

  • appropriate frame around it. There was a sort of 19th century gold frame,

  • quite ornate, and there's a frame

  • being made as we speak especially which will be quite a...I wouldn't say simple,

  • but you know very modest profile really, like you find around Flemish

  • paintings, mostly black, perhaps with a few gold lines and I've seen a

  • mock-up and it looks absolutely smashing and it really will bring out the

  • painting even better.

I'm part the way through the retouching, the restoration of the painting and that

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