Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 11

Peter Engels
Queen Elisabeth II-original abstract Royal portrait painting-contemporary Art

2024

About the Item

Peter Engels, painter of the soul Peter Engels painted the portrait of Nelson Mandela. It was displayed on the largest billboard of the world in Times Square, New York, on Mandela’s birthday. This boosted Peter Engels’ art career. Prince Albert of Monaco bought Peter Engels’ portrait of Grace Kelly. Peter Engels met and painted 007-actor Roger Moore, jazz legend Toots Thielemans, and Belgian Princess Astrid. Peter Engels met fashion icon Karl Lagerfeld and painted his portrait. Karl Lagerfeld calls Peter Engels the painter of his soul. Actress Nicole Kidman shortly lived in Peter Engels’ village where he painted her portrait. Peter Engels studied the few well-preserved sculptures of the Greek philosopher Hippocrates and painted his true portrait. Peter Engels was commissioned to paint the portrait of the late cosmetics tycoon Estée Lauder to revive her villa in Cannes, South of France. Peter Engels was commissioned to make the sculpture of Jordan Queen Rania. Peter Engels was commissioned to create the sculpture of Michelin star chef and father of ‘nouvelle cuisine’ Roger Vergé. The large sculpture was positioned in the marketplace of Mougins, South of France. A miniature serves as award for the Vergé international chef’s contest. Virgin boss Sir Richard Branson modelled “live” for Peter Engels. Brigitte Bardot congratulated Peter Engels on the series of portraits he painted of her. Peter Engels also painted many commissions of men, women and children. But also, captains of industry and family portraits. Engels mainly paints his works of art with the palette knife and in indefinable sepia tones. Lots of texture, light and shadow in his art. He exhibited during Art Basel in Miami, in New York, at Art Monaco, at FIAC in Paris and several other prestigious galleries and locations. Artist biography: Peter Engels, painter of the soul Peter Engels painted the portrait of Nelson Mandela. It was displayed on the largest billboard of the world in Times Square, New York, on Mandela’s birthday. This boosted Peter Engels’ art career. Prince Albert of Monaco bought Peter Engels’ portrait of Grace Kelly. Peter Engels met and painted 007-actor Roger Moore, jazz legend Toots Thielemans, and Belgian Princess Astrid. Peter Engels met fashion icon Karl Lagerfeld and painted his portrait. Karl Lagerfeld calls Peter Engels the painter of his soul. Actress Nicole Kidman shortly lived in Peter Engels’ village where he painted her portrait. Peter Engels studied the few well-preserved sculptures of the Greek philosopher Hippocrates and painted his true portrait. Peter Engels was commissioned to paint the portrait of the late cosmetics tycoon Estée Lauder to revive her villa in Cannes, South of France. Peter Engels was commissioned to make the sculpture of Jordan Queen Rania. Peter Engels was commissioned to create the sculpture of Michelin star chef and father of ‘nouvelle cuisine’ Roger Vergé. The large sculpture was positioned in the marketplace of Mougins, South of France. A miniature serves as award for the Vergé international chef’s contest. Virgin boss Sir Richard Branson modelled “live” for Peter Engels. Brigitte Bardot congratulated Peter Engels on the series of portraits he painted of her. Peter Engels also painted many commissions of men, women and children. But also, captains of industry and family portraits. Engels mainly paints his works of art with the palette knife and in indefinable sepia tones. Lots of texture, light and shadow in his art. He exhibited during Art Basel in Miami, in New York, at Art Monaco, at FIAC in Paris and several other prestigious galleries and locations.
  • Creator:
    Peter Engels (1959, Belgian)
  • Creation Year:
    2024
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 39.38 in (100 cm)Width: 47.25 in (120 cm)Depth: 1.58 in (4 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    London, GB
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU468313935742
More From This SellerView All
You May Also Like
  • Portrait of a Lady French 19th Century Painting Pastel on Canvas
    Located in FR
    19th Century Portrait of a Lady French Pastel on Canvas c1850-60 Indistinctly signed Unframed This has at some time been removed from its frame there is a small hole as shown in pho...
    Category

    Mid-19th Century Realist Portrait Paintings

    Materials

    Pastel

  • "No Why (Blue on Red)" - conceptual art, wall sculpture - Lawrence Weiner
    By Michael Porten
    Located in Atlanta, GA
    "No Why" is a part of a series of conceptual work featuring red, blue and yellow primary colors. Michael Porten is an interdisciplinary artist whose works range from paintings, scu...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Portrait Paintings

    Materials

    Acrylic, Wood

  • Noel Coward's Eye, #2257. Horst P. Horst Homage, Mixed media Collage on Paper.
    By Natasha Zupan
    Located in Miami Beach, FL
    Noel Coward's Eye, #2257 by Natasha Zupan Collage on Paper Measures: 11.41 in. H x 8.26 in. W One of a kind Signed lower right on recto by the artist Numbered on verso 2018 Natasha ...
    Category

    2010s Modern More Art

    Materials

    Paper, Acrylic, ABS

  • John Lennon& Yoko Ono Celebrities Portraits Pop Art
    By Oksana Tanasiv
    Located in Norwalk, CT
    Portrait of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, powerful couple whose relationship is one of the most famously iconic. In my creation, I explored the essence of iconography wrapped in bursts ...
    Category

    2010s Pop Art Portrait Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Acrylic

  • Portrait of a Lady, Katherine St Aubyn, Godolphin, Cornelius Johnson, Oil canvas
    By Cornelius Johnson
    Located in London, GB
    Titan Fine Art are pleased to present this charming bust-length portrait, which is a good example of the style of portrait painted in England in the second quarter of the seventeenth century. The attire consists of the finest silks, and the full billowing sleeves, bows, and hairstyle help in dating this portrait to circa 1637. The accessory par excellence – pearls – are worn as a necklace and were a very popular accessory. The artist makes no attempt to obey the rules of Baroque and instead sensitively depicts in complete honesty his sitter against a plain wall, and without distracting backdrops and flowing draperies – this work is very redolent of the sumptuous half-length female portraits that Cornelius Johnson...
    Category

    17th Century Old Masters Portrait Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Cotton Canvas, Oil

  • Pair (2) Portraits Gentleman & Lady, William & Rachel Helyar c.1656, Civil War
    By Robert Walker
    Located in London, GB
    Portrait of Colonel William Helyar (1621-1698) and Rachel Helyar (c.1633-1678) c.1656 Circle of Robert Walker (act. 1637-1656) These fascinating portraits, presented by Titan Fine Art, depict Colonel William Helyar, High Sheriff of Somersetshire, and his wife Rachel Helyar nee Wyndham, a daughter and co-heiress of Sir Hugh Wyndham, 1st Baronet (died 1663) of Pilsden Court, Dorset. They are exquisite examples of portraiture during the Interregnum when England was under various forms of republican government. The history of the seventeenth century is in part the story of the Stewarts and their approach to government and the church; their ebbing and flowing popularity and the disastrous decisions that led to Civil War. But another fascinating dynasty also ruled Britain: the Cromwell’s. Between 1653 and 1659, following the Civil Wars and experimental Commonwealth, Oliver Cromwell governed as Lord Protector followed by his son Richard. Cromwell’s Protectorate is usually imagined as a grey, joyless, military regime. But the reality was rather different. Cromwell presided over a colourful and fashionable court where music and the arts flourished, masques were revived and the first English operas performed. Too often the London of the 1650s is painted as puritanical and repressive in contrast to the vivid, fun-loving capital of the Restoration. Yet, under Cromwell, this was the city where the first coffee houses were opening, where a young Samuel Pepys was embarking on his career as a civil servant with the patronage of one of Cromwell’s councillors and where Christopher Wren was enjoying his new Chair of astronomy at Gresham College, appointed after the personal intervention of Cromwell. When Cromwell was invested as Lord Protector for the second time in 1657, the lavish ceremony in Westminster Hall and procession through London matched any previous coronation for pageantry with thousands lining the streets, bells ringing, bonfires blazing and free French wine flowing through the city. The gentleman in our portrait is Colonel William Helyar (1621-1698), Sheriff of Somerset and as a Royalist during the English Civil War. As one of the most prominent old families of the South-West, the Helyar’s family roots in Somerset can be traced back to 1616 when the Reverend William Helyar (1559-1645), chaplain to Elizabeth I, who was also a cousin by marriage, purchased the family residence Coker Court in East Coker, Somerset. He married a Devonshire heiress and several estates were bestowed on him as a result. He was a warm supporter of Charles I in the Civil War and was in residence at Exeter in 1643 when the Parliamentarians pillaged the cathedral. Elderly as he was, he boldly resisted them, but was beaten, pelted with mud, and locked up in a ship in the port and only let out on payment of £800. He retired to Coker where he died in 1645. His eldest son Henry died in 1634 and he was succeeded by his grandson, Colonel William Helyar, the sitter in our portrait. Colonel Helyar raised a troop of horse for King Charles I and was a colonel in the king's army. He was at Exeter when it was captured by the Parliamentary forces in 1646 and thus deemed ‘Traitor to the Parliament’. His estates were sequestered, but they were returned and he was discharged and pardoned on payment of £1,522. During the Restoration he was a Sheriff and he also helped James II repel the Monmouth Rebellion. The companion portrait represents the Colonel’s wife, Rachel Helyar (baptised 24th June 1633 at St Mary Aldermanbury, London – died 1678). She was the youngest daughter and co-heir of Sir Hugh Wyndham, 1st Baronet of Pilsdon Court and Mary Wyndham nee Alanson (Sir Hugh should not be confused with his first cousin once removed from Somerset, also Sir Hugh Wyndham (bef. 1604 - 1684). Rachel is a thirteenth generation descendant of King Henry III. The couple resided at the family seat of Coker Court (interestingly, within the churchyard, lie the remains of the poet T.S. Eliot who once wrote a poem about East Coker). A marriage settlement in extant shows that the couple were married in 1656; the portraits were most likely painted to mark this important event in the sitter’s lives. Rachel holds roses, the flower of love, and the putto pouring water is representative of her purity, and possibly, the plighting of troth. Colonel Helyar wears a gold wedding band. The couple had four sons: George, William (MP) (1662-1742), John, and Richard. Colonel Helyar died in December 1697 and was buried at Whitechurch, Dorset 2 Jan 1698. This period in which this portrait was painted was known as the Protectorate (1653-1659). This period offered relative peace, as the English Civil War ended in 1651. It was an interesting time for portraiture in England and Scotland – in between the great artistic geniuses and dominance of Van Dyke and Peter Lely. Much of the foreign-born artistic talent had fled England and Scotland during the Civil War and the artists that had remained were in great demand, in part due to the newly exposed strata of society wishing to be painted. Sitters on both sides were depicted in portraits in very similar ways. They are not, on the whole, shown as the Roundheads and Cavaliers of popular history. In fact, it is usually impossible to guess their political allegiances from the style of their portrait and their Parliamentarian and royalist iconographies, as portraits on both sides followed the same conventions and looked identical. Colonel Helyar has been depicted in armour and holding a Marshal’s baton of command, confirming his status. There is a great sense of realism and a particular delicacy, note the finely rendered hand resting on the rapier. Rachel is wearing a satin dress with expansive sleeves and a crimson drapery over her shoulder and held up by her left hand. She wears large pearl...
    Category

    17th Century Old Masters Portrait Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Oil

Recently Viewed

View All