growth of royal power forms to reflect the substance

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Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

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Page 1: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

Growth of Royal Power

Forms to Reflect the Substance

Page 2: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

Escorial and Versailles

Comparison of Style

Page 4: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance
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Page 10: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

The Old Chateau

Page 11: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance
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The Hall of Mirrors, 1685

                                                                                                                           

Produced by the Faubourg Saint-Antoine Glass Manufactory (later moved to Saint-Gobain)

Page 15: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

Levee

Page 16: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

The Queen’s Bed Chamber

                                                                           

Page 17: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

The Grand and Lesser Stables

                                                                                                      

Page 18: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

The Power of Portraits

• Anthony van Dyck (1599-1641)

• Diego Velazquez (1599-1660)

• Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640)

Page 19: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

Charles I by van Dyck

• Van Dyck’s portrait on horseback

• Patron of art and artists• Rubens and van Dyck

invited to court• Invests in Titians and

Raphaels• Connoisseur of Baroque

style

Page 20: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

Count Olivares and Philip IV Velasquez

Page 21: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

Marie de Medici by Rubens

• Wife of Henry IV• Mother of Louis XIII• Considered a “handsome,

heartless, vulgar woman”• Marriage short and

unhappy (follows Henry’s divorce from Marguerite of Valois)

• Dauphin 9 at the time of Henry’s assassination

Page 22: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

What you do when the facts are too hot to handleMythologize!

Page 23: Growth of Royal Power Forms to Reflect the Substance

Inigo Jones’s Banqueting Hall

• Built for James I• Replaced previous one

that had burned• Palladian style• Incorporates motifs

from Greece and Rome (columns, pilasters, pediments