- 31 May 2022
- 6:00 – 7:00 pm
- Online
This is an event for Early Career Researchers Network (ECRN) members only. You can find out more about the network here.
As the third speaker in our new Postdoctoral Fellowship Lecture Series, Christina J Faraday will present on her research project “Writing A New Story of Tudor Art”, funded by a Postdoctoral Fellowship from the PMC.
The story of Tudor art might seem familiar: from Holbein’s vision of Henry VIII to the arcane symbolism of Elizabeth I’s portraits. In recent years, however, this traditional view has been broadened, revealing the extensive use of portraits by the middling sort, the proliferation of narrative imagery in domestic decoration and the widespread use of textiles, luxury imports and printed media to convey messages about religion, status and identity. Yet despite these revelations, false divisions are still driven between the “finer” arts of the court, regional craftsmen and popular visual and material culture. The artistic production of the reigns of Henry VII, Edward VI and Mary I are often overshadowed by their more iconic neighbours. In this talk Faraday will bridge some of these disjunctions, showing how objects from a range of contexts took part in the same cultural conversations, and returning to the spotlight artistic developments under the “forgotten Tudors”.
About the speaker
-
Christina Faraday FSA FRHistS is an historian of art and ideas, with a special interest in Tudor and Stuart Britain and the wider sixteenth- and seventeenth-century world. She is a research fellow in history of art at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge and a BBC New Generation Thinker. She is also a trustee of the Walpole Society for the study of British art history and hosts British Art Matters, the official podcast of the William M.B. Berger Prize. Her first book, Tudor Liveliness: Vivid Art in Post-Reformation England was published by PMC in April 2023. Her next book, The Story of Tudor Art, will be published by Head of Zeus in 2025.