Our conventional understanding of English portraiture from the
age of Holbein and Henry VIII on to Reubens, VanDyck and Charles I
clings to the mainstream images of royalty and aristocracy and to
the succession of known practitioners of 'Renaissance'
portraiture.In almost every respect, the 'civic' portraits examined
here stand in sharp contrast to these traditional narratives.
Depicting mayors and aldermen, livery company masters, school and
college heads, they were meant to be read as statements about the
civic leaders and civic institutions rather than about the sitters
in their own right. Displayed in civic premises rather than country
homes, exemplifying civic rather than personal virtues, and usually
commissioned by institutions rather than their sitters, they have
yet to be considered as a type of their own, or in their
appropriate social and political context.This fascinating work will
appeal to both art historians and historians of early modern
Britain.
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