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Portrait of George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham by Peter Paul Rubens

Portrait of George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham

Peter Paul Rubens·1625

Historical Context

Rubens met George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, during diplomatic negotiations in 1625 when the artist served as an envoy for the Spanish Habsburg court. Buckingham was then the most powerful figure in England — royal favourite, admiral, and architect of foreign policy — and his extraordinary rise made him an irresistible subject for portraitists across Europe. Rubens captures the duke's magnetic charisma through confident pose and rich costume, combining the flattery required of court portraiture with a psychological directness he reserved for the most compelling sitters. The portrait reflects Rubens's unique position as artist-diplomat, moving between courts and capturing the era's powerful personalities with the same fluency he brought to mythological canvases. Now held at Pollok House, Glasgow.

Technical Analysis

The portrait captures Buckingham's legendary personal magnetism with Rubens' characteristic warmth and directness. The rich costume and confident pose project the duke's immense political power and social charisma.

Look Closer

  • ◆Buckingham is portrayed with the commanding presence and fashionable elegance that made him the most powerful man in England after the king.
  • ◆His elaborate court costume — lace, silk, and gold embroidery — expresses his extraordinary wealth and social influence.
  • ◆Rubens knew Buckingham from diplomatic circles, and the portrait captures both personal magnetism and political ambition.
  • ◆The swagger pose — one hand on hip, the other gesturing outward — projects the confidence that defined his career.

Condition & Conservation

This portrait from 1625 of the powerful English courtier has been conserved over the centuries. The rich costume details have been carefully maintained. Buckingham's assassination in 1628 gave the portrait additional memorial significance. The canvas has been relined and cleaned.

See It In Person

Pollok House

Glasgow, United Kingdom

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil on panel
Dimensions
60.9 × 47.3 cm
Era
Baroque
Style
Flemish Baroque
Genre
Portrait
Location
Pollok House, Glasgow
View on museum website →

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