Kneller, Sir Godfrey

views updated Jun 11 2018

Kneller, Sir Godfrey (c.1646–1723). A native of Lübeck who had studied under Rembrandt, Kneller came to England c.1676. He became court portraitist to William and Mary, Anne, and George I, enjoying a reputation which evidently eclipsed Van Dyck's. In fact, like all portraitists he was at his best with sitters to whom he warmed; otherwise a stereotyped baroque grandiloquence and a thronged studio obscured his real talents as a designer and handler of paint. In high favour with William III, Kneller was knighted in 1692 (created a baronet by George I), and was integrally of the ‘protestant establishment’. Kneller's more notable works include the eight ‘Hampton Court Beauties’ commissioned by Mary II, and his ‘Kit Kat Club’ portraits, executed between 1697 and 1721. There are at least 40 of these, all painted to a standard size and often revelatory of the versatile men who comprised this Whig dining club.

David Denis Aldridge

Kneller, Sir Godfrey

views updated May 18 2018

Kneller, Sir Godfrey (1646–1723) Painter, b. Germany, who settled in London (1674). His best-known works include 48 portraits, known as the Kit Cat Series. He founded the first English Academy of Painting (1711).

http://www.tate.org.uk; http://www.npg.org.uk

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Sir Godfrey Kneller

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