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Tudor Fashion

In Fine Style: The Art of Tudor and Stuart Fashion is on show at Buckingham Palace

 

Tudor and Stuart portraits were primarily meant to showcase the fashionable and hugely expensive clothes of their wearers. A fine exhibition of the Royal Collection gives a glimpse into portraits, jewelry and pieces of clothing of the time. Some of it has never been on show before. Exploring fashionable clothing worn during the Tudor and Stuart reigns (1485 – 1714) by members of the royal family, courtiers and the increasingly wealthy gentry, this exhibition compares paintings from the Royal Collection with rare surviving examples of costume, and unstitches the ‘truth’ of dress in art. In Fine Style follows the changing fashions of the period, demonstrates the spread of styles internationally and shows how clothing could convey important messages. Including works by Hans Holbein the Younger, Nicholas Hilliard, Van Dyck and Peter Lely, the exhibition brings together over 60 paintings. Such portraits allowed the sitter to express different aspects of their personality through clothing.  Among the paintings on display are two portraits of the renowned court beauty Frances Stuart, Duchess of Richmond.  Known as ‘La Belle Stuart’, she famously refused to become mistress to Charles II.  In a portrait by Sir Peter Lely (c.1662) the Duchess wears a glamorous yellow silk gown.  In another by Jacob Husymans (1664), she wears a masculine buff coat with her hair styled to resemble a male periwig, following the trend for women to dress in clothes inspired by male garments.  This portrait goes on display for the first time in the exhibition. Also shown is a series of drawings, garments, jewellery, accessories and armour. Amongst these are:

  • A hat badge, commonly known as the “Holbein George”shows a high-relief figure of St. George on horseback, facing right, slaying the dragon. This jewel has long been identified as belonging to a homogeneous group of small gold reliefs (émail en ronde bosse), distinguished by their style and enamelling technique. It may have been executed in Antwerp in 1520 and presented as a gift to Henry VIII.
  • A diamond ring given by Charles I to his 19-year-old wife. It is a gold and diamond signet ring bearing the royal coat of arms and the cypher of Henrietta Maria, given to the young Queen by her husband Charles I in around 1628, three years after their marriage.
  • A pendant of gold, rubies and diamond, incorporating a miniature of Elizabeth I.  It was possibly presented to a courtier by the Queen as a sign of favour and worn as an earring.  Earrings became an increasingly popular accessory for men towards the end of the 16th century, and it was fashionable to wear them in one ear only.
  • The ornate set of armour belonging to the 13-year-old Henry, Prince of Wales (c.1607) was designed to echo the full breeches and  V-shaped doublets of the day.  The armour was a gift from a French nobleman and a statement of great extravagance, particularly since the adolescent Prince would soon have outgrown it.  Heir to the English and Scottish thrones, Henry died of typhoid fever at the age of 18, and his younger brother succeeded him as the ill-fated Charles I.
  • The enamelled diamond-encrusted box in which Mary II kept her face patches, which were stuck to the face to emphasise her creamy white skin of the leisured class and to conceal blemishes.  They were applied using saliva or adhesive and produced in a variety of shapes, from crescents and flowers to animals – as many as seven were worn at once. It dates from around the year of the Queen’s death from smallpox, which caused terrible scarring to the skin.

    hat badge holbein george Royal Collection copyright Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 292x300 Tudor Fashion

    “Holbein George”

Exhibition curator Anna Reynolds of Royal Collection Trust says: “Fashion was hugely important to court life and entry to the inner circle was largely driven by personal appearance.  The rich and powerful were the trend-setters of the age, and used clothing to send out messages about their taste and status”.

In Fine Style: The Art of Tudor and Stuart Fashion
The Queen’s Gallery, Buckingham Palace
10.05.2013 -06.10.2013

READ MORE:

In Fine Style: The Art of Tudor and Stuart Fashion
By Anna Reynolds
The Royal Collection 2013
Hardback, 300 pages, 290 x 275 mm, over 250 colour illustrations
ISBN 978 1 905686 44 5

Robe
Welcome to ROBE – the fashion magazine the world has been waiting for, for the last 350 years, and your handy introduction to all that’s best in seventeenth-century haute-couture.
Paperback, 49 pages, 170 x 230 mm
ISBN 978 1 905686 85 8

In Fine Style App
This free interactive app lets you try on the outfits and accessories of the rich and powerful of the 16th and 17th centuries. Download the In Fine Style app, take a photo of yourself, and then try on fashionable clothes selected from the paintings in the exhibition. The app is inspired by a rare 17th-century portrait miniature of the wife of Charles I, Queen Henrietta Maria, and a set of painted transparent overlays that transform the queen’s costume, hairstyle and even her gender.

First Book of Fashion

Fashion conveys complex messages. The recreation of an outfit taken from one of an extraordinary series of Renaissance portraits reveals how one man made his mark on society.

In 1530 Matthäus Schwarz, an accountant in the German city of Augsburg, was man in his prime: slim, smart and successful. In a portrait that shows him in an outfit made for the occasion of the Imperial Diet of Augsburg, he is every inch the fashionable man about town, ready to step out of his door and join the party.

In the painting Schwarz wears a doublet made in panes of brilliant red and yellow silk over a shirt cut from fine linen. His slender calves are shown off in yellow leather hose and his knees are cross-gartered. On his feet are slim shoes and on his head is a flat black beret made in felted wool. At his waist are belts carrying the sword and red purse that complete the picture.

Now an experimental project undertaken by Dr Ulinka Rublack, Reader in Early Modern History at the University of Cambridge, has brought this portrait alive in a historically accurate reconstruction of the outfit it depicts. The project reveals the role of dress in conveying complex social and political messages and the way in which fashion had a profound effect on mood and behaviour. The outfit was designed to lift the spirit, make people marvel at novelty, and show off advanced civilization, she says.

“The colours red and yellow are associated with happiness – and they demonstrate Schwarz’s joy at the visit of the Emperor and his brother Ferdinand of Austria. Schwarz notes that he wished ‘to please Ferdinand’ and he did so by symbolically expressing gaiety, youthful agility, pride and beauty. His was an aesthetic performance of political values through the expense and effort he had invested in having so wonderful an outfit created,” says Dr Rublack.

Rublack Dressing Up 207x300 First Book of FashionHead accountant of the Fugger merchant company, Schwarz commissioned paintings of himself throughout his life showing in considerable detail the clothes that made up his changing and highly fashionable wardrobe. These portraits, known as the Schwarz Book of Clothes, represent a treasure trove of information for anyone interested in the history of fashion as well as Renaissance performances of the self as visual act.

In order to bring her project to fruition Dr Rublack enlisted the expertise of dress historian and theatre designer Jenny Tiramani to whom historical accuracy is of paramount importance.  She has worked with some of the country’s leading theatre directors – including Sir David MacVicar and Tim Carroll – and recently set up the School of Historical Dress with the backing of Mark Rylance, Sir Roy Strong and Dame Vivienne Westwood. Her knowledge of the materials, shape and construction of early 16th century clothing of the type worn by Schwarz was vital to the success of the project.

recreation dress augsburg 1530 217x300 First Book of FashionTo put together the outfit in the painting would have taken Schwarz many months of effort in sourcing materials and the craftspeople to make them up.  It would have incurred him considerable expense. And to put the finished garments on in the privacy of his home Schwarz would have needed the assistance of servants to lace him tightly in.  To achieve the narrow waist that such an outfit demands he would also have denied himself rich foods.

As a historian of material culture, Dr Rublack seeks to get close to the past by looking at the things that people lived with and among, and exploring their complex relationships with the objects they used and collected. She is particularly interested in fashion and her research concentrates on the Renaissance and Reformation.

Many of the things that have survived from these periods are those which were looked at rather than used, precious items which were regarded as heirlooms and tied up with notions of continuing value – painting and sculpture, jewellery and curiosities, for example.  Much rarer are items that had, at least in part, a practical function, such as textiles, clothing and footwear. And the further back one goes, fewer are the examples of this second group of things passed down to us.

matthäus schwarz 1530 2 182x300 First Book of Fashion

Historians of material culture need to look at visual and written sources, such as portraits and diaries, in addition to inventories, to build up a picture of how people lived in relation to the things they possessed – and the roles that these things played in shaping their lives. In the instance of fashion, the shaping element takes on a literal sense: just as the body makes demands on clothes so do clothes make a demand on the body.

In her book Dressing Up: Cultural Identity in Renaissance Europe (Oxford, 2011), Dr Rublack tells a vivid story of how people across society expressed their aspirations and emotions through appearances in an age which underwent fundamental changes in how things were made and marketed. The process of writing the book brought her close to the experience of what colours, textures and cuts appealed to men and women at the time – but she wanted to get a better grasp of both the practical processes that went into the making of dress and the experience of wearing garments that are, to our eyes, so outlandish.

The portrait that Dr Rublack chose shows an outfit that Schwarz wore in 1530. He had it made for one of the most important events of the era – the return of the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V to Germany after a nine-year period during which many parts of the country had turned to Protestant faiths. Augsburg witnessed long-standing confrontations between Protestants and Catholics and would eventually tolerate both faiths.

The purpose of the outfit was to impress and, in particular, to signal Schwarz’s allegiance to Catholicism and to the Emperor. And impress it did: in 1541 Schwarz was ennobled, a tremendous leap in social status for a man who was the son of a wine-merchant. Although he was well off, he was essentially a scribe who worked with figures, recording the business transactions and managing the credits of the Fugger merchant company.

“What we’ve learned in the course of this project is just how spectacular and dramatic such an assemblage would have been. The effect of the bright yellow is almost dazzling when you look at it for some time. The coordination of the textures, dyes and materials is subtle and ingenious. The outfit was designed to lift the spirit, make people marvel at novelty and show off advanced civilization.”

Handling the garments made for the project has shown the extent to which last-minute styling contributed to getting the right look. Dr Rublack says: “The shirt, doublet and hose would need to be skilfully fitted by at least one servant when Schwarz was dressed in the morning to make them work together perfectly. Once he had taken his sword and walked on the streets, a man like Schwarz would be completely confident of his sartorial achievement – but equally he would have been worried about any speck of dirt or loose seam as well as about over-eating and drinking.”

High fashion treads a dangerous line: in making a bold statement, it’s easy to look foolish. The Renaissance fascination with image-making encouraged self-display – but this had to be balanced by an awareness of the dangers of self-delusion and ridicule. In the Renaissance, as today, fashion encouraged fears as much as fantasies and fun, openness to change and reflection on what it means to be human.

SOURCE:

The First Book of Fashion

A selection of the outfits of Matthäus Schwarz may be seen here

See the video presenting the project

Read a review of “Dressing Up”

 

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Merovingian Queens

We know what Wisigarde, Arnegunde and Balthilde looked like…

Wisigarde († 540), Arnegunde († 580)  and Balthilde († 680) were respectively of Lombardian, Frankish and Anglo-Saxon descent. They were all Merovingian Queens. At their death they were dressed in their finest and buried with some of their most beautiful jewelry. Thus they present us with a glimpse of what they looked like when they died.

Wisigarde was daughter of the Lombardian king Wacho (510 -540) and the Gepidic princess, Austrigusa. In 531 she was betrothed to the Merovingian king, Theudebert I, whom she married in 538. In 1540 she was buried in the Cathedral of Cologne in grave together with her jewels and a luxurious set of drinking cups, horns, glasses and other utensils.

Merowingian queens 285x300 Merovingian Queens

Arnegunde was the third wife of Clothar I and mother til Chilperich I. She died around 580 nearly twenty years later than her husband. She was buried in St. Denis in Paris in a stone sarcophagus. She was app. 1.50 – 1.60 high and must have limped since child. Her dress was made of precious Byzantine silks and adorned with jewels. At the exhibition her sarcophagus is for the first time shown outside France.

Balthilde was born in England. Around 641 she came to the French court in Paris around 650, where she married the 16year old Clodvig II. After his death she governed on behalf of her young son. However in 665 she withdrew to the nunnery at Chelles, where she was buried some time after 680. Her body was venerated as a relic. Accordingly her attire was preserved and is shown at the exhibition.

It is seldom that archeology provides us with such detailed information about identifiable persons. However, due to such artifacts like e.g. the signet-ring of Arnegunde, archaeologist have been able to identify the persons and present us with a glimpse of what they looked like, their clothes and textiles as well as jewelry. At the same time they have been able to shed light on the burial customs while historians have weaved a rich cultural history of their lives and times.

Ring © Musee d Archeologie national ede Saint Germain en Laye Foto RMN Jean Gilles Berizzi 300x292 Merovingian Queens

Signet Ring of Arnegunde

This fascinating story is told in detail in a beautiful exhibition in Frankfurt, which also shows the remains of two children buried underneath the floor of the Cathedral in Frankfurt.

A catalogue accompanies the exhibition. In the first part historians and archaeologist have written about the history of the female elite in Merovingian time plus detailed information about the textiles and treasures found in their graves. The second part presents the actual artifacts, which are on show.

Archäologisches Museum Frankfurt
Karmelitergasse 1, Frankfurt am Main

10.12. 2012 bis 24.02.2013

READ MORE:

Königinnen der Merowinger – Adelsgräber aus den Kirchen von Köln, Saint-Denis, Chelles und Frankfurt am Main
Ed by Patrick Périn and Egon Wamers.
Schnell + Steiner 2012

 

 

Pomegranates

Pomegranates were a medieval luxury

“If you want to make a raymonia (Arabic: Rumānīya), take hens and cook them with salted meat. And take unblanched almons, and wash them in lukewarm water, and grind them very strongly and dilute with hens’ broth and strain. Afterwards, take pomegranate verjuice and pomegranate wine and add it. Then boil it and add enough sugar.” (From Melitta Weiss Adamson: Regional Cuisines of Medieval Europe: A Book of Essays, Routledge 2002  p. 69))

Another variation advises to use “fine white almonds” and grind them well in a mortar. And when they are well-powdered, blend them with 1 part juice of sour pomegranates. Finally add to the mortar powdered sugar, cinnamon and ginger to taste and serve it to roast c

hicken. (Libro del Coch). A third variation mentions the use of pomegranate seeds sprinkled on top as decoration. Other collections of

recipes mentions pomegranate-juice mixed into the mash made of baked eggplants together with sesame-seeds or other nuts plus caraway. If you want a precise recipe, the Medieval Spanish Chef furnishes one.

Pomegranate Tree 300x297 Pomegranates

Pomegranates – in season right now – were ancient delicacies. No one knows for certain were they originated, but Afghanistan, Persia, Armenia have been popular guesses. Wherever it was cultivated first, it soon became imbued with a heavy religious and symbolic significance representing fertility. Thus the scouts of Moses came back from Canaan carrying grapes, pomegranates and figs as signs of the plenty of the Promised Lands. Carbonised pomegranates were found in a tomb in Bronze Age Jericho.

Like the ancient Greeks, the Romans prized pomegranates and imported them from Cathage, describing them as malum punicum, the Cathaginian Apple. The medieval name, pomegranate, derives from pomum granatum, “seeded apple” and was identified as the apple, Adam choked on in the garden of Eden, hence the larynx was named as Adam’s Apple.

Pliny wrote about 9 varieties and Columella gave directions on how to preserve them by twisting the sprigs, by which they were hanging and then let them be on the tree. Later it was probably reintroduced to medieval Europe via the Arabs and through Sicily and Andalucia. Grown all along the Mediterranean it turned into a highly prized medieval delicacy used for wines, vinegars, candy and syrups; amongst other things it was used as an ingredient in delicate sauces served to chickens or doves. The trees were in themselves considered beautiful and thus grown in the more exotic enclosed gardens in Southern Europe as well as further North.

pomegranate margrete dress 300x277 Pomegranates

Silk Brocades
Pomegranates were a favourite pattern in silk brocades from the later Middle Ages and the Renaissance. A famous early example is the golden brocaded dress of Margaret I, Queen of Denmark, Norway and Sweden (1553 – 1412). The so-called Uppsala Gown was probably preserved in Roskilde after her death because it was believed that the gown was able to help distressed mothers giving birth. Later in the 17th century was brought to Uppsala as part of the Swedish spoils of war, where it has been kept since. In the late 20th century it was copied several times and these may be seen in the museums of the cathedrals of Roskilde (Denmark) and Uppsala (Sweden).

margaret gown034 220x300 Pomegranates

The dress was designed to exhibit conspicuous consumption, puddling on the floor and with a train. The cloth – gold on red silk was probably made in Lucca in Italy in the beginning of the 15th century. The design, however might be rather older. Traditionally it was said to have been the wedding dress of Queen Margaret, worn at her betrothal to the Norwegian King at the age of ten but a radio-carbon dating places the fabric between 1403 – 1439.

Technically speaking the weave is a diasper or lampas. The ground weave is a five-shaft warp satin with a thread count of 80/cm. The pattern-forming layer of the weave is shot through with gilded silver-lamella spun around a silk thread. The pattern repeat is 30 x 50 cm wide and consist of laurel garlands with a group of five pomegranates at their tangential points with a centre-motif resembling what in the literature anachronistically is called a “pineapple” – but which actually looks much more like a split pomegranate.

The dress is exhibited in Uppsala Cathedral North of Stockholm

uppsala dress035 225x300 Pomegranates

 READ MORE:

The Golden Gown of Queen Margareta in Uppsala Cathedral/Drottning Margaretas gyllene kjortel i Uppsala domkyrka
Agnes Geijer, Anne Marie Franze’n, Margareta Nockert
Kungl. Vitterhets Historie och Antikvitets Akademien, Stockholm 1994
ISBN 91-7402-249-0

 

Nasrid Silk

Fragments of resplendent silks are on show in both Granada and Madrid

The Nasrid kingdom of Granada is naturally known for its fantastic art and architecture. Less well-known is perhaps the textiles, which of course has been less prone to survive the last 1200 years. Nevertheless large pieces do exist and are currently shown at two locations: the Alhambra in Granada and Museo Lázaro Galdiano in Madrid.

The preserved pieces of Nasrid silk are of course those of royals, nobles, clergy and merchants; and especially those with a connection to the Royal Nasrids in Alhambra. Nevertheless they do give a unique introduction to the colours and richness of the people who lived in Medieval Spain – whether Muslims, Christians or Jews.

seda cantigas Nasrid Silk

Illustration from the Cantigas de Santa Maria 1250

From the 10th century onwards many of the textiles were produced in the protected workshops under the direct control of the reigning caliph and regulations ruled the quality, the aesthetics as well as prices and the textiles were marked with the royal “marsam”.

The textiles were also prized for their comfort. For instance Rodrigo Jiménez de Rada, who took personally part in the crusade, which ended at Las Navas de Tolosa 1212, prided himself in wearing Islamic clothing as probably did the royals, who were entombed in swashes of silks in Las Huelgas at the same time. From the same time the luxurious richness of the textiles are witnessed in The Cantigas de Santa Maria.

However, not all textiles were made of silk. Cotton was introduced to Sicily and Spain in the beginning of the 9th century, while wool and linen had been known since Antiquity. Silk was the premier material and silk production was ubiquitous in most of Al-Andalus. In 1154 Al-Idrisi reported that 3000 villages in Jen and 800 in the Alpujarras were cultivating mulberry trees and growing silkworms.

During this period weaving techniques became constantly more innovative and refined tissues and textiles were sought after all over Europe and Northern Africa.

Naturally textiles were used for clothing. However, other uses were curtains, carpets, covers for pillows and large pieces to wrap the dead in their graves as well as tents and blankets for horses and men going hunting or warring.

The exhibitions are accompanied by a beautiful publication plus a webpage with lots of content.

A la Luz de la Seda

 Vido about how the famous Lampas silk was made – and still is

Museo Lazaro Galdiano
2806.2012 -15.10.2012

Museo de la Alhambra
28.06.2012 – 31.12.2012

Catálogo de la colección de tejidos nazaríes del Museo Lázaro Galdiano y el Museo de la Alhambra.
Amparo López Redondo and Purificación Marinetto Sánchez.
Madrid 2012

 

Medieval Lingerie

Linen bras, a fully preserved linen male hose, 800-1000 fragments of shoes, embroidered lacing…these are just some of the spectacular findings, which turned up in 2008, when the archaeologists started to sieve a hoard of material probably used as insulation under a floor at the castle of Lengberg in Eastern Tirol around the second half of the 15th century. A large team of archaeologists, volunteers and “friends” at that point meticulously examined more than 25 m3 of debris.More than 17 boxes were filled with more than 4000 fragments stemming from at least 934 objects.

A preliminary overview tells of a cache of more than 200 coins, 160 coloured playing cards of carton belonging to more than four different stacks, objects of iron and alloys, bones, horn, glass, ceramics plus more than 50 pieces of writings from amongst other things accounts, chits and liturgical texts.

And then there are the textiles from the 15th century. Apart from more than 2700 fragments of woollen rocks, embroidered silks and linens plus buttons, pompons etc. the most spectacular findings were the linen underwear: bras, pleated shirts for children or young women, fragments of hats and linen headgear plus a piece of a (probably male linen) underwear complete with a fragment of a codpiece. Remarkably the linen pieces are in much better condition than the woollen fragments.

Lengberg bra with sprang 300x247 Medieval Lingerie

Lengberg bra with sprang. By kind permission by Beatrix Nutz

Especially the four bras have garnered interest. Two of the more fragmented pieces seem to have been used as a kind of “false” shirt ending just below the breast and used to cover a décolleté. Both these bras have decorated lower ends with finger-loop-laces – sown on with lace-stitches and resulting in a kind of simple needle-lace decoration. For the techniques used see here. The third bra looks nearly modern with two broad straps and a possible back strap. This bra is worked with needle-lace on the shoulder straps and sprang-work between the cups. Finally there is a fourth bra, which looks as if it was a typical longline-bra from the 1930s. Especially the well-preserved fragments of laces are important as they demonstrate an earlier introduction of these techniques than hitherto expected.

When found the archaeologists were astounded. Were they really 15th-century pieces of lingerie? However, the textiles were recently carbon-14 dated confirming the date of the finds to the 15th century.

The research methods are varied: apart from more traditional archaeological textile-research, tests of DNA in order to decide on the gender of the person having worn the garments are undertaken as well as chemical analyses in order to define the pigments used.

The detailed research is undertaken by Beatrix Nutz and shall lead to her PhD. As of now only some results have been made widely available at the homepage of the University of Innsbruck. Responsible for the whole project of analysing and cataloguing the cache of material culture from the 15th century is Dr. Harald Stadler at the University of Innsbruck.

Read about the bras

Read about the lacemaking

Read an article by Beatrix Nutz in the BBC History Magazine (subscription only)

Arbeitsgruppe Bekleidung und textile Techniken des Instituts für Archaeologen