West Country to World S End (Paperback)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

West Country to World S End (Paperback) UJDHR2QWPGHM ~ Doc > West Country to World s End (Paperback) W est Country to W orld s End (Paperback) Filesize: 9.05 MB Reviews Great electronic book and helpful one. Of course, it is play, still an interesting and amazing literature. I am just delighted to inform you that here is the finest ebook i have got go through in my own daily life and might be he finest pdf for actually. (Lora Johns III) DISCLAIMER | DMCA RZHE0ALDMR03 \\ Kindle / West Country to World s End (Paperback) WEST COUNTRY TO WORLD S END (PAPERBACK) To save West Country to World s End (Paperback) PDF, remember to click the hyperlink under and download the ebook or have access to other information that are relevant to WEST COUNTRY TO WORLD S END (PAPERBACK) book. Paul Holberton Publishing, United Kingdom, 2014. Paperback. Condition: New. Language: English . Brand New Book. During the Tudor Age the South West was famed for the innovation and endeavor of its people. Devon sea dogs Drake, Raleigh and Hawkins sailed to World s End in their pursuit of treasure and glory, Exeter s Nicholas Hilliard produced exquisite miniature portraits of courtiers while fellow Exonian Thomas Bodley re- founded Oxford University s library, later named the Bodleian in his honor. These men lived during the religious turmoil and political intrigue of Elizabeth I s reign - a time of opportunity for the merchants and traders of Devon. Many grew rich on the fruits of overseas trade and expressed their new status through fashionable houses, fine furnishings, decoration and valuable personal possessions. The demand for goods was met by a network of local cra workers: plasterers, masons, carpenters, lace-makers and goldsmiths. Aspects of their lives are revealed in this book, published to accompany the fascinating exhibition at the Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter, which will draw together paintings, artifacts and documents from galleries, museums and record oices to tell the story of the South West and its people set against the backdrop of one of the most, evocative periods in British history. Read West Country to World s End (Paperback) Online Download PDF West Country to World s End (Paperback) Download ePUB West Country to World s End (Paperback) UANHUYLFC1XV # Kindle > West Country to World s End (Paperback) See Also [PDF] Super Easy Storytelling The fast, simple way to tell fun stories with children Follow the hyperlink listed below to read "Super Easy Storytelling The fast, simple way to tell fun stories with children" file. Save eBook » [PDF] If I Have to Tell You One More Time: the Revolutionary Program That Gets Your Kids to Listen without Nagging, Reminding or Yelling Follow the hyperlink listed below to read "If I Have to Tell You One More Time: the Revolutionary Program That Gets Your Kids to Listen without Nagging, Reminding or Yelling" file. Save eBook » [PDF] Children s Educational Book: Junior Leonardo Da Vinci: An Introduction to the Art, Science and Inventions of This Great Genius. Age 7 8 9 10 Year-Olds. [Us English] Follow the hyperlink listed below to read "Children s Educational Book: Junior Leonardo Da Vinci: An Introduction to the Art, Science and Inventions of This Great Genius. Age 7 8 9 10 Year-Olds. [Us English]" file. Save eBook » [PDF] Children s Educational Book Junior Leonardo Da Vinci : An Introduction to the Art, Science and Inventions of This Great Genius Age 7 8 9 10 Year-Olds. [British English] Follow the hyperlink listed below to read "Children s Educational Book Junior Leonardo Da Vinci : An Introduction to the Art, Science and Inventions of This Great Genius Age 7 8 9 10 Year-Olds. [British English]" file. Save eBook » [PDF] Crochet: Learn How to Make Money with Crochet and Create 10 Most Popular Crochet Patterns for Sale: ( Learn to Read Crochet Patterns, Charts, and Graphs, Beginner s Crochet Guide with Pictures) Follow the hyperlink listed below to read "Crochet: Learn How to Make Money with Crochet and Create 10 Most Popular Crochet Patterns for Sale: ( Learn to Read Crochet Patterns, Charts, and Graphs, Beginner s Crochet Guide with Pictures)" file. Save eBook » [PDF] Dont Line Their Pockets With Gold Line Your Own A Small How To Book on Living Large Follow the hyperlink listed below to read "Dont Line Their Pockets With Gold Line Your Own A Small How To Book on Living Large" file. Save eBook » LGVCGOW0CKCY < Book \ West Country to World s End (Paperback) [PDF] Readers Clubhouse Set B Time to Open Click the web link below to download "Readers Clubhouse Set B Time to Open" file. Read eBook » [PDF] TJ new concept of the Preschool Quality Education Engineering the daily learning book of: new happy learning young children (3-5 years) Intermediate (3)(Chinese Edition) Click the web link below to download "TJ new concept of the Preschool Quality Education Engineering the daily learning book of: new happy learning young children (3-5 years) Intermediate (3)(Chinese Edition)" file. Read eBook » [PDF] Rumpy Dumb Bunny: An Early Reader Children s Book Click the web link below to download "Rumpy Dumb Bunny: An Early Reader Children s Book" file. Read eBook » [PDF] 13 Things Rich People Won t Tell You: 325+ Tried-And-True Secrets to Building Your Fortune No Matter What Your Salary (Hardback) Click the web link below to download "13 Things Rich People Won t Tell You: 325+ Tried-And-True Secrets to Building Your Fortune No Matter What Your Salary (Hardback)" file. Read eBook » [PDF] Depression: Cognitive Behaviour Therapy with Children and Young People Click the web link below to download "Depression: Cognitive Behaviour Therapy with Children and Young People" file. Read eBook » [PDF] Index to the Classified Subject Catalogue of the Bualo Library; The Whole System Being Adopted from the Classification and Subject Index of Mr. Melvil Dewey, with Some Modifications . Click the web link below to download "Index to the Classified Subject Catalogue of the Bualo Library; The Whole System Being Adopted from the Classification and Subject Index of Mr. Melvil Dewey, with Some Modifications ." file. Read eBook » .
Recommended publications
  • British Art Studies September 2020 Elizabethan and Jacobean Miniature Paintings in Context Edited by Catharine Macleod and Alexa
    British Art Studies September 2020 Elizabethan and Jacobean Miniature Paintings in Context Edited by Catharine MacLeod and Alexander Marr British Art Studies Issue 17, published 30 September 2020 Elizabethan and Jacobean Miniature Paintings in Context Edited by Catharine MacLeod and Alexander Marr Cover image: Left portrait: Isaac Oliver, Ludovick Stuart, 2nd Duke of Lennox, later Duke of Richmond, ca. 1605, watercolour on vellum, laid onto table-book leaf, 5.7 x 4.4 cm. Collection of National Portrait Gallery, London (NPG 3063); Right portrait: Isaac Oliver, Ludovick Stuart, 2nd Duke of Lennox, later Duke of Richmond, ca. 1603, watercolour on vellum, laid on card, 4.9 x 4 cm. Collection of Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge (FM 3869). Digital image courtesy of National Portrait Gallery, London (All rights reserved); Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge (All rights reserved). PDF generated on 21 July 2021 Note: British Art Studies is a digital publication and intended to be experienced online and referenced digitally. PDFs are provided for ease of reading offline. Please do not reference the PDF in academic citations: we recommend the use of DOIs (digital object identifiers) provided within the online article. Theseunique alphanumeric strings identify content and provide a persistent link to a location on the internet. A DOI is guaranteed never to change, so you can use it to link permanently to electronic documents with confidence. Published by: Paul Mellon Centre 16 Bedford Square London, WC1B 3JA https://www.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk In partnership with: Yale Center for British Art 1080 Chapel Street New Haven, Connecticut https://britishart.yale.edu ISSN: 2058-5462 DOI: 10.17658/issn.2058-5462 URL: https://www.britishartstudies.ac.uk Editorial team: https://www.britishartstudies.ac.uk/about/editorial-team Advisory board: https://www.britishartstudies.ac.uk/about/advisory-board Produced in the United Kingdom.
    [Show full text]
  • Nicholas Hilliard (1547–1619) Henry Percy, 9Th Earl of Northumberland, C
    Nicholas Hilliard (1547–1619), Portrait of Henry Percy, Ninth Earl of Northumberland, c. 1594-5 Fig. 1. Nicholas Hilliard (1547–1619) Portrait of Henry Percy, Ninth Earl of Northumberland, c. 1594-1595, miniature on parchment, 25.7 x 17.3 cm (slightly small than A4), Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam. 1. Introduction, Patronage, Dates, Description, Related Works 2. Melancholia, Panofsky, Dürer, Four Humours 3. Impresa, Archimedes, Galileo, „Tanti‟ 4. Secret Knowledge, School of Night, Square 5. Conclusion This article can be downloaded from http://www.shafe.co.uk/art/Northumberland.pdf 1 of 8 pages 1. Introduction Patronage This is arguably the most cryptic Tudor cabinet miniature. It is likely that is was commissioned by Henry Percy the Ninth Earl of Northumberland (1564-1632), a well known Elizabethan intellectual and cultural figure. He was known as the ‗Wizard Earl‘ because of his scientific and alchemical experiments and his large library. In 1594 Henry Percy married Dorothy Devereux sister of Robert Devereux, Second Earl of Essex. His southern estates were Petworth and Syon House, the latter he acquired through his marriage to Dorothy Devereux. He was a non-Catholic but argued for Catholic toleration and tried to negotiate with James VI of Scotland to reduce Catholic persecution when he became king of England. This did not happen and Henry‘s second cousin and agent Thomas Percy became one of the five conspirators in the Gunpowder Plot of 1605. As a result Henry Percy suspected of complicity and spent the next 17 years in the Tower of London and was financially ruined by a fine of £30,000.
    [Show full text]
  • Nicholas Hilliard. Life of an Artist
    Helen Hackett Review of Elizabeth Goldring, Nicholas Hilliard: Life of an Artist According to Elizabeth Goldring in this engrossing biography, the earliest recorded use of the term ‘miniature’ in English literature is in Sir Philip Sidney’s prose romance The New Arcadia (written in the early 1580s). Four ladies bathe and splash playfully in a river, personified as male, and he responds delightedly by making numerous bubbles, as if ‘he would in each of those bubbles set forth the miniature of them’. It’s a pleasing image of the delicacy and radiance of the works of Nicholas Hilliard, the leading miniaturist (or ‘limner’) of the Elizabethan age, whom Sidney knew, and with whom he discussed emerging ideas about the theory and practice of art. In some ways a miniature had the ephemerality of a bubble, capturing an individual at a fleeting moment in time, as often recorded in an inscription noting the date and the sitter’s age. Yet it also made that moment last for posterity, as in this sumptuous book, where Hilliard’s subjects gaze back at us piercingly from many of the 250 colour illustrations. Miniatures were more often referred to as ‘jewels’, capturing their glittering beauty and the way that they were worn on the body, often in cases embellished with gem-stones. Within the pictures also, Hilliard gave minute attention to costumes and jewellery, developing a new technique of simulating gems by ‘laying a ground of real silver, burnishing it to a shine, and then, with a heated needle, modelling the jewel out of stained resin’.
    [Show full text]
  • Images of Elizabeth I by Contrasting These Two Pictures
    Lecture (2 hours with a 15 minute break) • When Elizabeth came to the throne in 1558 she was besieged by problems. The had been terrible harvests in the previous two years and rampant inflation partly caused by Henry VIII’s reducing the silver content of coins. In the previous eleven years the country had veered from extreme Protestantism to extreme Catholicism and in 1558 the country had lost Calais, its last remnant of French territory. In addition to all this Elizabeth was a woman and it was assumed she would soon marry with the danger of the country being run by a foreigner for their own country’s interests. • Yet, by the end of her reign, England was a world power. Pope Sixtus V could not understand it: "She is only a woman, only mistress of half an island, and yet she makes herself feared by Spain, by France, by all". • How did she do it? She was intelligent, shrewd, chose her advisers well and became popular by creating and reinforcing powerful images of herself. This talk explores those images and we start by comparing two. Notes (Wikipedia and other sites & books) • Education. The nobility had a different education from us, Lady Elizabeth for example, was taught grammar, theology, history, rhetoric, logic, philosophy, arithmetic, literature, geometry, music and above all languages. By the age of eleven Elizabeth was able to speak fluently in six languages - French, Greek, Latin, Spanish, Welsh and of course English. • Many of her closest advisors were similarly schooled and Elizabethans loved puzzles, word play, and decoding obscure references.
    [Show full text]
  • Elizabethan Visual Propaganda and Its Popular Perception OV Dmitriyeva
    From Sacral Images to the Image of the Sacred: Elizabethan Visual Propaganda and Its Popular Perception O. V. Dmitriyeva The Reformation of the sixteenth century gave rise to two mutually exclu- sive (or at least contradictory) tendencies in the ecclesiastical and artistic life of Britain. First, the reformed Anglican Church, even though less resolutely than continental Protestants, rebutted sacral images such as the icons, sculptures of saints, or crucifixes that formerly adorned Catholic churches and served as ob- jects of veneration for the faithful. Even though neither spontaneous iconoclastic outbursts under Henry VIII nor the forceful campaign against ‘idolatry’ under Edward VI1 succeeded in total obliteration of images in Anglican churches, the essence and role of images in liturgical practice underwent a radical revision. Early confessional documents such as The Ten Articles and The Book of Homi- lies composed by Thomas Cranmer and apologetic treatises by Anglican theolo- gians all refused to grant images any holiness. Even though their presence in a church was allowed, images were not to be worshipped or treated with too much reverence. Pictorial or sculptural images of Christ, the Virgin Mary or saints were equated with mundane material objects. Bishop John Jewell likened them to a book that narrates the events of sacred history but is not, in itself, an object of worship.2 This viewpoint was made part of official royal proclamations and 3 eventually became a law. 1 On various aspects and stages of iconoclasm in England during the Reformation see J. Phillips, The Reformation of Images: Destruction of Art in England, 1535 – 1660 (Berke- ley, 1973); M.
    [Show full text]
  • Large Print Guide
    The Waddesdon Bequest Funded by The Rothschild Foundation Contents Section 1 5 Section 2 9 Section 3a 13 Section 3b 27 Section 4a 43 Section 4b 61 Section 5a 75 Section 5b 91 Section 6a 101 Section 6b 103 Section 6c 107 Section 6d 113 Section 6e 119 Section 6f 123 Section 6g 129 Section 6h 135 Section 7a 141 Section 7b 145 Section 7c 149 Section 7d 151 Section 7e 153 Section 7f 157 Section 7g 163 Section 7h 169 Section 7i 173 Section 7j 179 Section 8 187 Entrance 8 2 3a 7j 1 7i 7h 3b 6a 7g 4a 6b 7f 6c 7e 6d 7d 4b 6e 7c 5a 6f 7b 6g 7a 6h 5b 4 Section 1 Entrance 8 2 3a 7j 1 7i 7h 3b 6a 7g 4a 6b 7f 6c 7e 6d 7d 4b 6e 7c 5a 6f 7b 6g 7a 6h 5b 5 The Waddesdon Bequest is a collection of outstanding quality generously bequeathed to the British Museum in 1898 by Baron Ferdinand Rothschild MP (1839–1898). It is a family collection, formed by a father and son: Baron Anselm von Rothschild (1803–1874) of Frankfurt and Vienna, and Baron Ferdinand, who became a British citizen in 1860, and a Trustee of the British Museum in 1896. Named after Baron Ferdinand’s Renaissance-style château, Waddesdon Manor in Buckinghamshire, the Bequest is a 19th-century recreation of a princely Kunstkammer or ‘art chamber’ of the Renaissance. The collection demonstrates how, within two generations, the Rothschilds expanded from Frankfurt to become Europe’s leading banking dynasty.
    [Show full text]
  • Portrait Miniatures from the Time of Holbein 1531 to That of Sir Wilhelm Roso 1860
    THE C ONNOISSEUR SERIES. Editedy b Gleeson White. PORTRAIT M INIATURES. THE C ONNOISSEUR SERIES. Edited ky Gleeson White. PORTRAIT M INIATURES: from the time of Holbein, 1 531, to that of Sir William Ross, i860. By GEORGE С Williamson, Lilt.D. With numerous Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 12s. bd. net. HISTORICAL P ORTRAITS: some Notes on the P ainted Portraits of Celebrated Characters of England, Scotland and Ireland. By H. B. Wheatley, F.S.A. Wilh Seventy-four Illustrations taken direct from the originals. Demy 8vo. lew. bd. net. JAPANESE I LLUSTRATION : being a History of t he Arts of Wood-cutting anil Colour Printing in Japan. By Edward F. Strange, M J. S. With Eight coloured and Eighty- eight Black-and-Wliite Illustrations. Deiny.8vo. \2s. (xi. net. RTTHE A OF THE HOUSE. By Rosamund Marriott W atson. With numerous Illustrations. Demy 8vo. (1>. net. PICTURE P OSTERS. By Charles Hiatt. With O ne Hundred and Fifty Reproductions of the most Artistic Examples of all Countries. Demy 8vo. 12s. bd. net. LONDON: G EORGE BELL AND SONS. ANDREW P LIMER. 1763-1837. LADY R AVENSWORTH, LADY PAUL, AND MISS SIMPSON. Ownhr C. J Wertheimer, Esq. PORTRAIT MINIATURES FROMHE T TIME OF HOLBEIN 13 5 1 TO THAT OF SIR WILLIAM ROSS i 860. A HANDBOOK FOR C OLLECTORS BY GEORGE С W ILLIAMSON, Litt.D. LONDON: G EORGE BELL AND SONS YORK S TREET, COVENT GARDEN, MDCCCXCVII CIIISWICK P RESS :—CHARLES WHITUNGHAXI AND CO. TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON, л/ PREFACE. In t reating of miniatures it is impossible to avoid reference to the standard book on the subject, — Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • 19075 Nicholas Hilliard (British, Born Exeter 1547, Died London 1619) a Young Lady in a Gold and Crimson Dress with a High-Standing Ruff England, London Dated 1605
    19075 Nicholas Hilliard (British, born Exeter 1547, died London 1619) A young lady in a gold and crimson dress with a high-standing ruff England, London Dated 1605 Oval, 51 x 41 mm; pigments and gum arabic on vellum, in a later silver frame with spiral surmount and central hanging loop. Published Daphne Foskett, A Dictionary of British Miniature Painters, New York and Washington, 1972, illustrated in colour, plate VII, fig. 22. Provenance T. Whitcombe Greene Esq.; Sotheby’s, London, 7 July 1932, lot 120; With Leo R. Schidlof, from whom acquired by Ernst Holzscheiter in Paris, 21 May 1938 (inv. nos. MD/0163 and 290); By descent until 2018 Exhibited Geneva 1956, no. 210, illustrated. Edinburgh 1975, no. 28. SAM FOGG www.samfogg.com Inscriptions Inscribed and dated in gold on the blue background ‘An[n]o D[omi]ni 1605 . / Ætatis sua[e] . ’ Condition, Materials and Technique Finely ground mineral and earth pigments were applied in gum arabic solutions on to the vellum support using several grades of brush, both in dilute washes and in thick dots with a high concentration of pigment. Evidence of pooling at the junctions between the blue (lapis lazuli) background and the figure’s outline, as well as areas in which it shows through other paint layers from below (figs. 1-2) indicate that it was applied close to the start of the painting process, and that the form of the sitter must have been left either partly or completely in reserve. The white ground and the creamy surface of the vellum itself are allowed to show through the upper layers in several places, especially in the sitter’s head, where the topography of the face is defined with only very sparse, loose shading.
    [Show full text]
  • Elizabethan Treasures, Miniatures by Hilliard and Oliver Exhibition Review - National Portrait Gallery, London, 21 February - 19 May 2019
    Miranda Revue pluridisciplinaire du monde anglophone / Multidisciplinary peer-reviewed journal on the English- speaking world 19 | 2019 Rethinking Laughter in Contemporary Anglophone Theatre Elizabethan Treasures, Miniatures by Hilliard and Oliver Exhibition review - National Portrait Gallery, London, 21 February - 19 May 2019 Alice Leroy Electronic version URL: http://journals.openedition.org/miranda/21042 DOI: 10.4000/miranda.21042 ISSN: 2108-6559 Publisher Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès Printed version Date of publication: 7 October 2019 Electronic reference Alice Leroy, “Elizabethan Treasures, Miniatures by Hilliard and Oliver”, Miranda [Online], 19 | 2019, Online since 09 October 2019, connection on 16 February 2021. URL: http://journals.openedition.org/ miranda/21042 ; DOI: https://doi.org/10.4000/miranda.21042 This text was automatically generated on 16 February 2021. Miranda is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Elizabethan Treasures, Miniatures by Hilliard and Oliver 1 Elizabethan Treasures, Miniatures by Hilliard and Oliver Exhibition review - National Portrait Gallery, London, 21 February - 19 May 2019 Alice Leroy 1 The lives, scandals, and passions of the Tudors have fascinated the general public for a long time and have been the recurring object of exhibitions in Great-Britain and abroad over the past few years.1 Although the National Portrait Gallery’s latest exhibition tackles the Renaissance period, the originality and the appeal of Elizabethan Treasures: Miniatures by Hilliard and Oliver are that it makes the conscious decision to shift the focus from a troubled royal dynasty to the artistic and cultural practices of the late 16th and early 17th centuries – in order to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Hilliard’s death, it sets aside Flemish large-scale portraiture and concentrates on one of the earliest English traditions of painting: the art of limning.
    [Show full text]
  • 03 Elizabethan Miniatures
    Laurence Shafe - Elizabethan Miniatures Exhibition Exhibits 1. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Self-Portrait aged 30, 1577, V&A. Sixteenth century self-portraits are rare. 2. The role of the miniature, Drake Jewel, 1586 3. Quote from The Art of Limning with Queen Elizabeth I, by Nicholas Hilliard, 1572. Photograph: National Portrait Gallery 4. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Richard Hilliard, 1576-77, his father who married Laurence Wall (his master’s daughter) and had eight children 5. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Alice Hilliard (née Brandon), 1578, first wife of Nicholas Hilliard, his master’s daughter 6. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Elizabeth I Playing a Lute, c. 1575 7. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Sir Francis Drake, 1581, he owned the Drake Jewel, 1586 8. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Sir Christopher Hatton, 1588-91, full length, experimented in 1580s with different formats, also see 9. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), George Clifford, 3rd Earl of CuMberland 10. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Young Man AMong Roses, c. 1587, V&A 11. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Young Man Clasping a Hand froM the Clouds, 1588 1 12. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Young Man Against FlaMes, c. 1590-1600, V&A 13. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Elizabeth I, c. 1600. based on Coronation Portrait painting (Anon, c. 1600) 14. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Self-portrait aged 30, Victoria & Albert Museum 15. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Sir Walter Ralegh, c. 1585, National Portrait Gallery 16. Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547-1619), Henry Percy, 9th Earl of NorthuMberland, 1590-93 17.
    [Show full text]
  • Nicholas Hilliard's Portraits of the Elizabethan Court
    Nicholas Hilliard’s Portraits of the Elizabethan Court a hand or eye By Hilliard drawn is worth a history By a worse painter made “The Storm” John Donne icholas Hilliard (1547-1619) was an English goldsmith and limner best known for his many portrait miniatures of members of the Ncourts of Elizabeth I and James I. He mostly painted oval minia- tures of just two to three inches, but also some larger cabinet miniatures up to ten inches tall, and at least two famous half-length panel portraits of Queen Elizabeth, one of which—the Pelican Portrait—is reproduced on the front cover. From our 21st Century perspective, his paintings exemplify the visual im- age of Elizabethan England. As an artist he was conservative by European standards, but his paintings are superbly executed and have a freshness and charm that has ensured his continuing reputation as the central artistic figure of the Elizabethan age—the only English painter whose work reflects, in its delicate microcosm, the world of Shakespeare’s plays. His images preserve the faces of the Queen, Sir Francis Drake, Sir Philip Sidney, the Earls of Essex, Leicester and Oxford, Lord Burghley and oth- er aristocrats. Hilliard said in his book, The Arte of Limning: “It is for the service of noble persons very meet, in small volumes, in private manner, for them to have the portraits and pictures of themselves, their peers, or any other foreign persons which are of interest to them.” THE OXFORDIAN Volume 21 2019 229 Nicholas Hilliard’s Portraits of the Elizabethan Court Hilliard’s miniatures have a jewel-like quality likely because he trained and worked initially as a goldsmith; in fact, they were made to be worn like jewels and set into lockets, or kept in drawers, reflecting their nature as romantic keepsakes.
    [Show full text]
  • The Spirit & Force Of
    THE SPIRIT &FORCE OF ART Drawing in Britain 1600–1750 THE SPIRIT & FORCE OF ART: DRAWING IN BRITAIN 1600–1750 3 Clifford Street, London 20 June to 6 July 2018 London London Art Week 29 June to 6 July 2018 new york TeFAF New York Fall 27 to 31 October 2018 THE SPIRIT &FORCE OF ART Drawing in Britain 1600–1750 Lowell Libson & Jonny Yarker Ltd London 2018 Contents Index of Artists 6 Foreword Lowell Libson 7 Introduction Jonny Yarker 8 3 Clifford Street · London w1S 2LF +44 (0)20 7734 8686 ‘The spirit and force of art’: [email protected] Defining Drawing in England, 1600–1750 www.libson-yarker.com Richard Stephens 11 Lowell Libson [email protected] A Lost Art? Collecting Early British Drawings Jonny Yarker & their Critical Fate [email protected] Richard Stephens and Jonny Yarker 33 Cressida St Aubyn [email protected] CATALoGUe Published by Lowell Libson & Jonny Yarker Ltd 2018 I Towards an English School 41 Text and publication © Lowell Libson & Jonny Yarker Ltd All rights reserved II Academies 69 ISBn 978 1 9999783 1 0 Designed by Dalrymple III The Rise of the Sketch 85 Set in Mário Feliciano’s Rongel type Photography by Rodney Todd-White & Son Ltd VI From Prospect to Landscape 101 Colour reproduction by Altaimage Ltd Printed in Belgium by Albe De Coker V From Ceiling to Exhibition Room: the Progress of History Painting 127 VI Face Painting 147 VII ‘A noble, delightful and useful art’: Drawings by Antiquarians, Amateurs and Artisans 169 VIII The Age of Hogarth 181 Notes and References 199 Index of Artists Foreword References are to catalogue numbers Laguerre, Louis 47 We are delighted to publish this catalogue which represents the culmination of over ten years of gathering these rare drawings which were created before the ‘Golden Age’ Amigoni, Jacopo 58 Laroon, Marcellus 73 of British watercolours and which demonstrate the formation of an identifiable ‘British’ Baron, Bernard 74 Laroon, Marcellus, the younger 84 School.
    [Show full text]