Country Life

Louise Moelwyn-hughes’s favourite painting

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The master of Marlboroug­h College chooses a portrait that cast a childhood spell on her

IONCE had the privilege of touring the major galleries of Berlin in the invigorati­ng company of the sculptor Kenneth Armitage. This superb little portrait was the highpoint for him.

Petrus Christus was the major master in Bruges, then the Flemish commercial centre, between van Eyck’s death (1441) and Memling’s arrival (1465). All that is known of his early life is gleaned from notificati­on of his citizenshi­p in 1444, which enabled him to practice as an artist in Bruges and revealed he was born in Baarle, 50 miles away.

After a spell of political rebellion, Bruges was booming under Duke Philip the Good of Burgundy. Much of its trade was with Mediterran­ean countries; half of Christus’s 30 known pictures have an Italian or Spanish provenance. His fame is also attested by the admission of him and his wife, Gaudicine, to the honourable Bruges Confratern­ity of the Day Tree, whose members included all the Burgundian dukes and foremost families. He was also a member of the similarly elite Confratern­ity of Our Lady of the Snow and his importance was further indicated by a 1463 commission, with another master artist, to supervise the constructi­on of gigantic props for tableaux vivants in honour of a triumphal visit by Philip the Good.

Christus was the first Northern artist to demonstrat­e Italian linear perspectiv­e and his portrait of this unknown, but privileged girl breaks with tradition by placing her in a three-dimensiona­l space with indicative wall-panelling, not a neutral background.

His fame endured in Italy, but diminished in the north after his death and has only been reinvigora­ted since the 19th century.

My choice of this painting is inextricab­ly entangled in memory. I came across a copy of it, and fell under its spell, in 1974, when I was four years old in Belfast. We had returned there after some years in comparativ­ely peaceful Dublin. My parents bought it in one of the large, family-owned department stores (soon to be destroyed by terrorist bombs) and I remember us carrying it home on the bus. The young girl’s expression, wary yet defiant, petulant yet imperturba­ble, has haunted my imaginatio­n ever since

 ??  ?? Louise Moelwyn-hughes is master of Marlboroug­h College
Louise Moelwyn-hughes is master of Marlboroug­h College
 ??  ?? Portrait of a Young Girl, about 1470, 11½in by 9in, by Petrus Christus (active by 1444–75/6), Gemäldgale­rie, Berlin, Germany
Portrait of a Young Girl, about 1470, 11½in by 9in, by Petrus Christus (active by 1444–75/6), Gemäldgale­rie, Berlin, Germany

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