
Thank you to The History Press for a copy of this book to review.
This book is the first one I’ve read of this type, looking at the Elizabethan age through portraiture, including the more famous Coronation, Rainbow, and Armada portraits, and the lesser-known Pelican and miniature portraits. Also includes portraits of people of the Elizabethan age like Walter Raleigh, William Shakespeare, and Robert Dudley.
It is divided into digestible sections covering different parts of Elizabeth’s life and reign, in largely chronological order, though with dives in and out of the lives of Elizabeth’s courtiers and favourites. There are lots of implications raised about the portraits, and what little things you might overlook could mean, whether it’s a gift from a courtier trying to curry favour through jewels, or the symbolism of a flower, hourglass, or animal that appears.
It’s not a biography of Elizabeth I but an art history, looking at the life and reign of Elizabeth through the portraiture. It clearly links the portraits to different parts of her life and reign, giving the context of how the portraits link to different periods of her life, and how the imagery changes over her life.
A must-have for any fans or academics of the Elizabethan era because it looks at the age from a new perspective and can offer plenty of insights into self-fashioning, image, and power. It was utterly fascinating and so well-researched.
Chapters:
- Elizabeth I and the English Renaissance
- Family and Survival: The Early Years
- ‘God Hath Raised Me High’: Accession and Religion
- ‘One Mistress and No Master’: Marriage Game
- Nicholas Hillard: The Queen’s Painter
- Secrets and Codes: Mary, Queen of Scots
- Elizabethan Arts: The Golden Age
- Gold and Glory: Exploration and Armada
- Dress, Dazzle and Display: Mask of Youth
- Final Years: Death and Legacy