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1 of 253523 objects
Queen Alexandra (1844-1925) when Princess of Wales Signed and dated 1863
Oil on canvas | 160.9 x 113.0 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external) | RCIN 400874
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Princess Alexandra (1844–1925) or Alix, as she was known in the family, was Queen Victoria’s daughter-in-law. She married the Queen’s eldest son Albert Edward, Prince of Wales and the future Edward VII, in 1863. This portrait was painted before she came over to England. Franz Xaver Winterhalter, the Queen’s favourite portrait painter, was ill at the time so Queen Victoria decided to ‘get Lauchert (the next best) to go to Copenhagen to paint her’. The Prince's elder sister Victoria, the Crown Princess of Prussia, described Alexandra as having ‘a lovely figure but very thin, a complexion as beautiful as possible. Very fine white regular teeth and very fine large eyes – with extremely prettily marked eyebrows. A very fine well-shaped nose, very narrow but a little long – her whole face is very narrow, her forehead too but well shaped and not at all flat. Her voice, her walk, carriage and manner are perfect, she is one of the most ladylike and aristocratic looking people I ever saw’ and ‘outrageously beautiful’. Queen Victoria thought her a ‘dear, lovely being’. Signed and dated: R Lauchert [initials in monogram] 1863. Inscribed on the back by the artist with the name of the sitter and: 'painted by R Lauchert [initials in monogram] Copenhagen January 1863.'
Provenance
Painted for Queen Victoria
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Medium and techniques
Oil on canvas
Measurements
160.9 x 113.0 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external)
Category
Object type(s)
Other number(s)
Alternative title(s)
Alexandra, Princess of Wales (1844-1925)