Anthony Van Dyck has remained in touch…
July 1632 CE
Anthony Van Dyck has remained in touch with the English court, and has helped King Charles' agents in their search for pictures.
He had also sent back some of his own works, including a portrait (1623) of himself with Endymion Porter, one of Charles's agents, a mythology (Rinaldo and Armida, 1629, now in the Baltimore Museum of Art), and a religious work for the Queen.
He had also painted Charles's sister, Queen Elizabeth of Bohemia in the Hague in 1632.
Van Dyck had in April of this year, returned to London, and was taken under the wing of the court immediately, being knighted in July and at the same time receiving a pension of two hundred pounds per year, in the grant of which he is described as principalle Paynter in ordinary to their majesties.
Van Dyck is well paid for paintings in addition to this, at least in theory, as King Charles will not actually pay over his pension for five years, and reduce the price of many paintings.
He is provided with a house on the river at Blackfriars, at this time just outside the City and hence avoiding the monopoly of the Painters Guild.
A suite of rooms in Eltham Palace, no longer used by the Royal family, is also provided as a country retreat.