Lot Essay
The scene depicts King Charles II's embarkation on the beach of Scheveningen that was to take him back to England for the Restoration. The events on the day - 24 May 1660 - were recorded by Samuel Pepys who, as the secretary of the fleet commander Lord Sandwich, was an eye-witness to the events. Pepys described the shore as being 'so full of people ... as that it was as black (which otherwise is white sand), as every one could stand by another.' Beelt painted different versions of this subject, one being in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam (inv. no. A2692).
Another version with a decidedly meager assemblage of people, was painted in 1659 (private collection). In that year the King intended to return in secrecy in order to support a Rebellion against the Parliamentarians. This Rebellion was uncovered before it got started and the King's departure was cancelled. In 1660 Cromwell died which paved the way for an official return of the King with all pomp and circumstance that Beelt so successfully put on canvas in the present lot.
For further reading on the depicted subject, see B. Rapp, 'Charles II's Departure for England; Two Paintings by Cornelis Beelt', The Connoisseur, December 1949, pp. 110-1.
Another version with a decidedly meager assemblage of people, was painted in 1659 (private collection). In that year the King intended to return in secrecy in order to support a Rebellion against the Parliamentarians. This Rebellion was uncovered before it got started and the King's departure was cancelled. In 1660 Cromwell died which paved the way for an official return of the King with all pomp and circumstance that Beelt so successfully put on canvas in the present lot.
For further reading on the depicted subject, see B. Rapp, 'Charles II's Departure for England; Two Paintings by Cornelis Beelt', The Connoisseur, December 1949, pp. 110-1.