This dissertation examines the relationship between art and power in the reign of Catherine II of Russia (1762-1796). It considers Catherine's state portraits as historical texts that revealed symbolic manifestations of autocratic power, underscoring the close relationship between aesthetics and politics during the reign of Russia's longest serving female ruler. The Russian empress actively exploited the portrait medium in order to transcend the limitations of her gender, assert legitimacy and display herself as an exemplar of absolute monarchy. The resulting symbolic representation was protean and adaptive, and it provided Catherine with a means to negotiate the anomaly of female rule and the ambiguity of her Petrine inheritance. In the re...
This thesis explores the development in the pictorial representation of four important French royal ...
Portraits of Queen Marie Leszczinska (1703-1768) were highly visible in eighteenth-century France. A...
Soon after the coup d’état of 1762, which brought Catherine II, also known as Catherine the Great, t...
This work will explore Catherine the Great as a ruler and the importance of her wardrobe and the cho...
Historians of Russian monarchy have avoided the concept of sovereignty, choosing instead to describe...
This paper explores portrayals of Catherinian Russia in British and American periodicals during her ...
This dissertation analyzes representations of Marie-Louise, second wife to Napoleon Bonaparte and Em...
The “Coronation portrait of Catherine II” by Stephano Torelli introduces a new type of iconography o...
This article examines some of the complexities of female rule during the reign of Catherine II (1762...
When Western audiences think about Russia today, images of the hyper-masculine Putin administration ...
The problem of representation of monarch’s power was of considerable importance for the Russian art ...
Through an analysis of physical depictions and literary records, this thesis explored what messages ...
© Serials Publications. The relevance of the studied problem is caused by need of studying the pract...
he paper examines parallels and difference between representation strategies of Maria Theresia and C...
This dissertation seeks to compare the ways in which Henry VIII, James II, and George II, along with...
This thesis explores the development in the pictorial representation of four important French royal ...
Portraits of Queen Marie Leszczinska (1703-1768) were highly visible in eighteenth-century France. A...
Soon after the coup d’état of 1762, which brought Catherine II, also known as Catherine the Great, t...
This work will explore Catherine the Great as a ruler and the importance of her wardrobe and the cho...
Historians of Russian monarchy have avoided the concept of sovereignty, choosing instead to describe...
This paper explores portrayals of Catherinian Russia in British and American periodicals during her ...
This dissertation analyzes representations of Marie-Louise, second wife to Napoleon Bonaparte and Em...
The “Coronation portrait of Catherine II” by Stephano Torelli introduces a new type of iconography o...
This article examines some of the complexities of female rule during the reign of Catherine II (1762...
When Western audiences think about Russia today, images of the hyper-masculine Putin administration ...
The problem of representation of monarch’s power was of considerable importance for the Russian art ...
Through an analysis of physical depictions and literary records, this thesis explored what messages ...
© Serials Publications. The relevance of the studied problem is caused by need of studying the pract...
he paper examines parallels and difference between representation strategies of Maria Theresia and C...
This dissertation seeks to compare the ways in which Henry VIII, James II, and George II, along with...
This thesis explores the development in the pictorial representation of four important French royal ...
Portraits of Queen Marie Leszczinska (1703-1768) were highly visible in eighteenth-century France. A...
Soon after the coup d’état of 1762, which brought Catherine II, also known as Catherine the Great, t...