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A three-quarter-length portrait to the left, turned away from the viewer and looking back over his left shoulder. He wears a long coat that is a version of the Persian vest introduced into the English court in 1666. It is heavily barred with gold and silver braiding and he also wears a loosely knotted linen cravat and a heavy leather sword belt. The background consists of rock and foliage with a ship in action on the left. Harman served throughout the Dutch Wars. He was captain of James, Duke of York's, flagship at the Battle of Lowestoft in 1665, the first major action of the Second Dutch War, where James was in overall command. His defence of the 'Henry', 80 guns, when he was Rear-Admiral of the White squadron on the first day of the Four Days' Fight in 1666 is one of the epics of naval warfare.
It is perhaps the most dashing of the 'flagmen of Lowestoft' series commissioned by James, Duke of York, and was one of those seen by Pepys, either begun or finished, in Lely's studio on 18 April 1666. Lely, a Dutchman who arrived in England in 1641 after the death of van Dyck, soon became his successor as leading portraitist of the day. He worked for Charles I, continued to flourish under the Commonwealth and Protectorate, and after the Restoration of 1660 was appointed Principal Painter to Charles II. The full 'flagmen' set consists of 13 individual portraits, of which George IV presented 11 plus a copy of that of Admiral Sir John Lawson (BHC2833) to Greenwich Hospital in 1824. The originals of Lawson and of Prince Rupert were retained in the Royal Collection, although William IV presented an extended full-length copy of the latter (BHC2990) to the Hospital in 1835.
Title
Flagmen of Lowestoft: Admiral Sir John Harman (d. 1673)
Date
1666
Medium
oil on canvas
Measurements
H 127 x W 101.5 cm
Accession number
BHC2750
Acquisition method
National Maritime Museum (Greenwich Hospital Collection)
Work type
Painting