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Catherine Daunt (Sussex / National Portrait Gallery), 'Heroes and villains: portraits of the famous and the infamous in Tudor and Jacobean England' , Monday 18 June 2012, 7.30p.m.
The Monarch, Camden , 40–42 Chalk Farm Road, Greater London NW1 8BG
Free to attend.
The next in the AAH's regular ‘Art History in the Pub' series of talks, lectures and events is happening on 18 June, bringing the latest art historical research to a wide audience.
These talks present a selection of the wide variety of topics, periods, methods and approaches common in art historical study, and are aimed at a generalist audience.
The next speaker is Catherine Daunt, a collaborative doctoral student at the University of Sussex and the National Portrait Gallery. Under Elizabeth I, the market for painted and printed portraits in England greatly expanded generating a widespread interest in the appearance of famous figures from the nation’s past. History in this period was often presented as a series of biographies of key players in the fields of warfare, exploration, poetry, politics, the Church and, of course, royalty. Contemporaries were encouraged to study the lives of these figures, good and bad, and to learn from their virtues and vices. A fashion for painted portraits sets of these figures emerged and hastily made copies of well-known portraits were produced and re-produced by artists' workshops to meet the demand. This talk will explore this often-overlooked category of painting and present some intriguing new findings from recent technical analysis of surviving paintings.
(Note: Copies of several of the portraits Catherine will be mentioning during her talk are actually hung on the wall of the venue, The Monarch in Chalk Farm!).
40–42 Chalk Farm Road Camden NW1 8BG,
Nearest underground stations: Chalk Farm and Camden Town
Catherine Daunt is currently working towards a DPhil at the University of Sussex on 'Portrait sets in Tudor and Jacobean England'. Funded by the Leverhulme Trust, Catherine is undertaking her research in collaboration with the National Portrait Gallery's Making Art in Tudor Britain project (www.npg.org.uk/matb). She previously worked as an Assistant Curator at the National Portrait Gallery.
Future dates Monday 30 July, Paul Dobraszczyk (University of Manchester), ‘Into the belly of the beast: exploring London's Victorian sewers’; Monday 27 August TBC