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Notes
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The starling is probably intended as a rhyming pun of East Harling, where the family had recently inherited a large estate. Squirrels nibbling on nuts feature on the heraldry of the Lovell family: the windows of the church at East Harling include two of the family’s coats of arms in stained glass, each showing six red squirrels. The commission may commemorate the birth of a son to the couple in the spring of 1526, but it also showed off their new status as wealthy landowners.
Title
A Lady with a Squirrel and a Starling (Anne Lovell?)
Date
about 1526-8
Medium
Oil on oak
Measurements
H 56 x W 38.8 cm
Accession number
NG6540
Acquisition method
Bought with contributions from the National Heritage Memorial Fund and The Art Fund and Mr J. Paul Getty Jnr (through the American Friends of the National Gallery, London), 1992
Work type
Painting