Willem van de Velde the Elder had…
1674 CE
Willem van de Velde the Elder had been the official artist of the Dutch fleet for a period, being present at the Four Days Battle, June 1–4, 1666, and the St. James's Day Battle, July 25, 1666, to make sketches.
In his work on the biographies of artists, Arnold Houbraken quotes Gerard Brandt's biography of Admiral Michiel de Ruyter, relating the anecdote where Willem van de Velde asked Admiral de Ruyter permission to have a galley row him around for a good view of the proceedings on the evening of the Four Days battle in 1666.
He wasn't the only artist to paint the scenes of this battle, his son, Ludolf Bakhuysen, and Pieter Cornelisz van Soest also made paintings of it.
This act later was the reason that van Velde gained his marine commission in London.
The date, 1672, commonly given for his entry into the service of Charles II of England, was at a time when the Dutch Republic was at war with England (Third Anglo-Dutch War).
After his move to England, the exact date of which is uncertain, but reportedly at the end of 1672 or beginning of 1673, he is said to have lived with his family in East Lane, Greenwich, and to have used the Queen’s House, now part of the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, as a studio.