Marie Haneton
About this artwork
A crest and an inscription on the back of this painting were discovered in 1971 during cleaning. It revealed the identity of the sitter as Marie Haneton. Marie was the second daughter of Philippe Haneton, who in 1518 had been appointed first secretary of the Grand Council by Charles V. In 1520 he commissioned the great Haneton triptych from Van Orley, now in the Musée Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels. In the triptych, Marie is shown with her mother Marguerite Numan, and her four sisters. In this portrait Marie is instantly recognisable as the same girl. The faint inscription of the back says that she died shortly after her marriage in either 1525 or 1526.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Bernard van Orley (about 1488 - 1541) Netherlandish
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title:Marie Haneton
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date created:About 1518 - 1519
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materials:Oil on panel
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measurements:75.20 x 56.20 cm; Framed: 101.20 x 83.80 x 7.00 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Bequest of Sir Hugh Hume Campbell 1894
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accession number:NG 1895
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gallery:
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depicted:
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artwork photographed by:Antonia Reeve
Bernard van Orley
Bernard van Orley
Van Orley’s flourishing workshop in Brussels produced paintings and designs for tapestries and stained glass. His paintings combine inspiration from Rogier van der Weyden’s emotionally expressive work with the ideal proportions of Italian Renaissance figures, especially those of Raphael. Van Orley...