The painting by 17th-century Flemish artist Anthony van Dyck
depicts a bearded Brussels magistrate wearing a ruff and was
brought to the show by an English priest who bought it in an
antiques shop for only 400 pounds.
Father Jamie MacLeod, who purchased the painting because he
liked the thick gold-colored frame, plans to sell the portrait
to fund the restoration of bells at the chapel of a religious
retreat he runs in Derbyshire, England.
Philip Mould, an art expert working for the BBC's Antiques
Roadshow, had suspected that the painting might be an original
Van Dyck and had urged the cleric to have the canvas stripped
back to its original paintwork and authenticated.
Christopher Brown, one of the world's leading authorities on Van
Dyck and director of the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, was then
able to verify that the painting was genuine, the program said.
The portrait is believed to have been completed as part of Van
Dyck's preparation for a larger 1634 work showing seven
magistrates. That painting has since been destroyed.
Mould described the find as "a thrilling example" of the skills
of direct observation that made Van Dyke such a great portrait
painter.
Van Dyck was one of England's leading court painters in the 17th
century, making his name with portraits of Charles I of England
and his family and court.
Fiona Bruce, a presenter on the BBC show, said she had suspected
the canvas was a Van Dyck when she first saw it.
"It's everyone's dream to spot a hidden masterpiece. To discover
a genuine Van Dyck is incredibly exciting," she said.
The episode detailing the find is due to be broadcast in Britain
on Sunday evening. ($1 = 0.6063 British pounds)
(Editing by David Goodman)
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