Portraiture is a quintessentially renaissance art form which evolved in response to new ideas about realism, likeness and posterity.
Portraiture is a quintessentially renaissance art form which evolved in response to new ideas about realism, likeness and posterity. This lecture looks at its development in Italy and the north, across a variety of media, from sculpted busts and medals to painted portraits. It also discusses how and why portraits were made, and the role they played in expressing status, personal qualities and commemoration, unravelling the meanings of still-life detail and costume to shed light on the social practices of the day. We encounter a host of examples, from the unfamiliar to the iconic, including Van Eyck’s Arnolfini Portrait, Dürer’s Self Portrait as Christ, Holbein’s Ambassadors, and the Mona Lisa.
How to book this event:
Booking not required. Doors open at 6:30pm for refreshments. Lecture at 7pm (one hour). Guests are always welcome £7 cash on the door or use one of your tokens. Available to purchase £15 for 3 tokens.
THE ARTS SOCIETY ACCREDITED LECTURER

Dr Paula Nuttall
Specialist in Renaissance art, both Italian and northern European, on which she has published widely, notably From Flanders to Florence: the Impact of Netherlandish Painting 1400-1500 (Yale, 2004). Has collaborated on major exhibitions including Jan van Eyck: an Optical Revolution (Ghent, 2020). Former Director of the V&A Medieval and Renaissance Year course, and lecturer at – among others – the Courtauld Institute and the British Institute of Florence.
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