I walked from Hampstead tube station and across Hampstead Heath up to Kenwood House to see the art collection yesterday. A bit of culture with a great cafe and a nice walk thrown in is my kind of ideal day out!
I haven't been to Kenwood House in years and years but my other half had visited more recently and suggested the venue for our weekly "day out".Which is how I came to be pictured with Rembrandt - by himself!
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| Me - writing a Facebook post about Rembrandt and Vermeer in the Drawing Room of Kenwood House |
Kenwood House was bought by Lord Iveagh (Edward Cecil Guinness, 1st Earl of Iveagh 1847-1927) to save it from development. It subsequently became a place to display his amazing art collection - which was bequeathed to the nation on his death.
This was the most generous bequest of art in history - and was conditional on it being on display in the house for free!
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| On the left: The Guitar Player by Vermeer On the right: Self Portrait with Two Circles by Rembrandt |
It includes:
Rembrandt’s Self-portrait with Two Circles. READ ABOUT IT
Painted in around 1665, it was first reproduced as a print in the mid 18th century and was publicly exhibited at the Royal Academy in London in1877. As a consequence it was a famous and celebrated artwork when Lord Iveagh purchased it on 10 July 1888.
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| Rembrandt’s Self-portrait with Two Circles |
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| I'm the sort of visitor who always likes to get a close-up of the brush marks! |
Vermeer's The Guitar Player
"....one of only 36 known paintings by Vermeer, an artist who specialised in depicting everyday life in domestic interiors. A young girl, possibly his daughter Maria, is interrupted from her guitar playing, as the string continues to vibrate. Vermeer has seated the girl so far to the left that her arm is cropped by the edge of the painting."
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| The Guitar Player by Vermeer |
PLUS a very large collection of paintings by Sir Joshua Reynolds, Franz Hals, Anthony Van Dyck, Thomas Gainsborough, George Romney and Albert Cuyp - amongst others.
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Margaret Hyde "Daisy" Leiter (1898) who became Margaret Howard, Countess of Suffolk by John Singer Sargent |
It seems there's a bit of a tradition for Americans marrying into the aristocracy!









