Description
This book explores the rich but understudied relationship between English country houses and the portraits they contain. It features essays by well-known scholars such as Alison Yarrington, Gill Perry, Kate Retford, Harriet Guest, Emma Barker and Desmond Shawe-Taylor. Works discussed include grand portraits, intimate pastels and imposing sculptures. Moving between residences as diverse as Stowe, Althorp Park, the Vache, Chatsworth, Knole and Windsor Castle, it unpicks the significance of various spaces - the closet, the gallery, the library - and the ways in which portraiture interacted with those environments. It explores questions around gender, investigating narratives of family and kinship in portraits of women as wives and daughters, but also as mistresses and celebrities. It also interrogates representations of military heroes in order to explore the wider, complex ties between these families, their houses, and imperial conflict.
This book will be essential reading for all those interested in eighteenth-century studies, especially for those studying portraiture and country houses.
About the Author
Gill Perry is Professor of Art History at the Open University
Kate Retford is Senior Lecturer in History of Art at Birkbeck College, University of London
Jordan Vibert is a Freelance Researcher specialising in eighteenth-century art and culture
Hannah Lyons is a Researcher and Information Assistant at Tate Britain, London
Reviews
"the book provides valuable information that increases the reader's understanding of the crucial place portraits occupy in the political and familial role of the country house"
(Hugh Belsey, Art Newspaper, 01/07/2014)
Book Information
ISBN 9780719090394
Author Gill Perry
Format Hardback
Page Count 320
Imprint Manchester University Press
Publisher Manchester University Press
Dimensions(mm) 240mm * 170mm * 27mm