Presentation for the Textile Museum Associates of Southern California by a young Australian scholar of medieval and Renaissance history and textiles, Dr Lauren Mackay, which I'm happy to say she pronounces the Scots way, rhymes with sky.
This was a brilliant, tightly constructed, and presented by an experienced university lecturer aware of avoiding intensely technical terms, and, well, wonderful.
She has a book coming out soon, too.
The purpose of this event
was to draw the lines of connection between the Eastern textile artworks acquired by Henry VIII to display his power and wealth, and the continuing cultural exchange this trade developed. Styles of dress as well as carpets and the influence on taste in motifs were depicted in many of Holbein's paintings.
Since many of the carpets and clothing depicted are no longer available to us, the paintings form an important chronicle of the times.
We see Moorish design in the works created in Spain which was Islamic dominated for centuries, until Ferdinand and Isabella developed their iron grip, driving out Moslems and Jews and with them the scholarship and artworks they had perfected.
Their daughter, Katherine of Aragon, was of course, Henry's first Queen. She brought with her Spanish style in dress, including wonderful black work embroidery, and the Moorish influence of Spanish art at the time.
Elizabeth I, three monarchs later, though less interested in acquiring the textiles, was astute in wielding their power and creating diplomatic links with the East and their leaders.
That's the gist, here's the pix, showing paintings depicting significant artworks in royal contexts along with other similar examples in real life.
Here, below, is the Field of the Cloth of Gold, Henry's French extravaganza displaying his power and wealth on French territory, with cloth literally including gold fibers. Textiles were a portable demonstration, proclaiming the intent to dominate.
The Islamic motifs, where shapes, not people are seen in the symmetrically balanced works. And East meets West in the bottom image, the main players of the era.
This was one of the best lectures I've been at in ages. Only one tiny drawback: on my phone not possible to stop the captions. Between the Islamic names, the art terms, and her Australian accent, the captions were less useful than ever. Tudor Court was rendered as cheetah caught, etc.
Small quibble for a great experience.
Wondering if comments are not working again. Blogger keeps having moments.
ReplyDeleteI fixated on the use of table rugs and wondered at how they would be cleaned should some poor soul spill their tankard of wine. I wouldn't want to be the servant who had to deal with that!
ReplyDeleteI don't think they were tablecloths. More like runners, or official coverings. They didn't have snacks at meetings then, and the scribes taking notes weren't at the table. Off to the side, because worker bees.
ReplyDeleteSuch beautiful rugs and tapestries.
ReplyDelete