“A fascinating study of how the cultural map of the 17th century responded to geopolitical rupture.”—Apollo
~Apollo
“The King's Pictures. . . gives an account of its subject that is both deeply learned and page-turningly absorbing.”—David Ekserdjian, Financial Times
~David Ekserdjian, Financial Times
“In The King’s Pictures by Francis Haskell, the whole fascinating...story is retold by a master art historian.”—Frank Whitford, The Sunday Times
~Frank Whitford, The Sunday Times
“A connoisseur’s volume: the story of the European dispersal of Charles I’s incomparable Old Master collection – Titian, Raphael, Leonardo – in exchanges determined by volatile political fortunes. Haskell was a pioneer who expanded art history to include patronage and collecting. This study, in his usual lively, engaging style, appears posthumously.”—Financial Times
~Financial Times
"Well worth waiting for, it is a characteristically masterly examination of one of the most compelling chapters in the entire history of art collecting, the first and tragically short-lived flowering of the British taste for contemporary and earlier art from overseas."—David Ekserdjian, The Spectator
~David Ekserdjian, The Spectator
“[T]he book is fulsomely illustrated, making it a pleasure to view as well as read.”—Robert O’Bryne, Apollo Magazine
~Robert O'Bryne, Apollo Magazine
“Frances Haskell’s research on Charles I’s collection. . .appears now for the first time in a brisk, urbane and prodigiously illustrated volume that comes as close as possible in two dimensions to re-creating the sumptuousness of the Caroline Court. . .The King’s Pictures is a finely wrought composition – rich in detail and full of sharply drawn profiles of strutting aristocrats and shady dealers.”—David Gelber, Country Life
~David Gelber, Country Life
“Lively and intelligent”—Charles Hope, New York Review of Books
~Charles Hope, New York Review of Books
‘What Haskell brings, along with the scrupulous documentation, impeccable scholarship and a host of other qualities to which we have become accustomed, is perspective. With every character and with every fact the reader instantly sees how big they are and in what relation they stand to everything else. The result is a picture that makes sense. The perspective comes not least through a profound understanding of quality in painting.’—Desmond Shawe-Taylor, The Burlington Magazine
~Desmond Shawe-Taylor, Burlington Magazine