KEY POINTS:
Talk about an expensive personal ad.
The earliest known full-length portrait of Queen Elizabeth I is thought to have been commissioned to help the English monarch "advertise" herself to potential suitors. Yesterday it sold for £2.6 million ($7.1 million) to Philip Mould Fine Paintings in London.
The life-sized painting by Antwerp artist Steven van der Meulen, who went on to become an important English court painter in the 1560s, had been expected to fetch between £700,000 and £1 million, auctioneer Sotheby's said.
"Like her father, Henry VIII, she was incredibly conscious of how important her image was," said Emmeline Hallmark, head of the Sotheby's British paintings department.
"This painting is so pretty and decorative, and the symbolism alludes to the fact that she is in the ripeness of her life," she said, adding that the portrait was probably made when Elizabeth was around 30 years old.
The painting, nearly 2m tall, depicts the pale-skinned queen standing in a crimson satin dress adorned with pearls and coloured gems.
In her right hand she carries a carnation, which Sotheby's said could symbolise a future betrothal, and in her left a glove, symbolic of power and wealth.
The auctioneer said that as well as emphasising her youthful appearance, the depiction of fruit and scented flowers in the background would have reinforced her allure.
In gazing to the viewer's left, she looks like she may be expecting the arrival of a suitor.
Elizabeth was under pressure to find a husband from early on in her reign. Despite a string of suitors throughout the 1560s and 1570s, Elizabeth never married, and was dubbed the "Virgin Queen".
- Reuters