488 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.Charlotte supported all types of visual culture, but especially of the so-called "minor arts," such as engraving, embroidery, transparencies (illuminated paintings), wax modeling and miniature painting, fields which were traditionally open to or dominated by women. My dissertation demonstrates that Charlotte did not promote hierarchical distinctions prevalent in the larger art world, such as that between oil painting and the minor arts. Her patronage supplemented the limited opportunities available to women artists in other institutions and to create new career possibilities for women. The growth of such specifically feminine artistic patronage and production has, howeve...
Patronage is vital to the art world and the success and notoriety of its artists. From straightforwa...
History passes down the visages of Tudor monarchs and their contemporaries through paintings that at...
This thesis examines the relationship of George Villiers, First Duke of Buckingham (1592--1628) to t...
488 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.Charlotte supported all types...
Patronage can be hard to come by for any artist. It was especially difficult for women artists durin...
In the period from 1640 until 1660 England witnessed religious dispute, political dissent and milita...
Queen Caroline (1683-1737), the wife of King George II, remains an enigma to most historians and the...
This thesis examines the portraiture and patronage of Marie Thérèse Louise de Savoie-C...
Art was integral to the lives of the late Stuart aristocracy. Through case studies of the art patro...
This thesis explores the extent to which elite women of the eighteenth century commissioned architec...
Contributing to emerging art historical interests in both portraiture and female patronage, the curr...
Caroline Bonaparte Murat created an identity for herself through the art that she collected during t...
This thesis deals with the intersection of art and Victorian gender. The first chapter will deal wit...
This article examines women artists’ relationships with collectors and patrons in England between th...
© 1996 Dr. Caroline JordanUntil recent feminist revisions of art history, British and British coloni...
Patronage is vital to the art world and the success and notoriety of its artists. From straightforwa...
History passes down the visages of Tudor monarchs and their contemporaries through paintings that at...
This thesis examines the relationship of George Villiers, First Duke of Buckingham (1592--1628) to t...
488 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.Charlotte supported all types...
Patronage can be hard to come by for any artist. It was especially difficult for women artists durin...
In the period from 1640 until 1660 England witnessed religious dispute, political dissent and milita...
Queen Caroline (1683-1737), the wife of King George II, remains an enigma to most historians and the...
This thesis examines the portraiture and patronage of Marie Thérèse Louise de Savoie-C...
Art was integral to the lives of the late Stuart aristocracy. Through case studies of the art patro...
This thesis explores the extent to which elite women of the eighteenth century commissioned architec...
Contributing to emerging art historical interests in both portraiture and female patronage, the curr...
Caroline Bonaparte Murat created an identity for herself through the art that she collected during t...
This thesis deals with the intersection of art and Victorian gender. The first chapter will deal wit...
This article examines women artists’ relationships with collectors and patrons in England between th...
© 1996 Dr. Caroline JordanUntil recent feminist revisions of art history, British and British coloni...
Patronage is vital to the art world and the success and notoriety of its artists. From straightforwa...
History passes down the visages of Tudor monarchs and their contemporaries through paintings that at...
This thesis examines the relationship of George Villiers, First Duke of Buckingham (1592--1628) to t...