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A small in-focus exhibition on the sixteenth-century
artist Marcus Gheeraerts II opened at Tate Britain on 2 December
2002 and marked the 400th anniversary of the death, in March 1603,
of his most celebrated sitter, Queen Elizabeth I.
The portrait of Captain Thomas Lee (1594),
also known as 'the man with bare legs', is one of the best loved
early pictures in the Tate Collection. Yet little is known about
the man who painted it: Marcus Gheeraerts II, or 'the Younger' (1561/2-1636).
Not only is this exhibition the first monographic show to be devoted
to this important late Elizabethan and Jacobean artist, but the
accompanying publication by Tate Curator Karen Hearn is the first
book to focus solely on his work.
Gheeraerts produced some of the most haunting and
beautiful portraits in British art. Although born overseas, in Bruges,
it was he who defined the public images of many of the leading Britons
of his age. The display brings together over twenty two works, including
loaned paintings, engravings and portrait miniatures from the National
Portrait Gallery, British Museum, Scottish National Portrait Gallery
and various private collections. There are also sixteenth-century
illustrated medical books from the British Library, and a richly
embroidered woman's jacket from the Victoria & Albert Museum.
The image of the 'Virgin Queen' - Elizabeth I - is
only one of the female roles of the age. Paradoxically, it was under
this celibate monarch that a surprising English sub-genre, the 'pregnancy
portrait' developed. These portraits depict women who are clearly
- even exaggeratedly - pregnant. In an age when a wife's role was
to bear many healthy children to extend a newly elevated family's
name and influence, such a portrait would be visual 'evidence' of
hoped-for dynastic success. Simultaneously, childbirth was considered
so hazardous that it would also record the features of a beloved
woman who might shortly be dead. Gheeraerts painted a number of
these and Tate recently acquired an exceptionally beautiful example,
Portrait of an Unknown Lady c.1595. It has not been exhibited
for more than thirty years and has been newly conserved for this
display.
Gheeraerts depicted his male subjects as heroes, often
in the increasingly fashionable full-length format. Elizabeth I's
final favourite, Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, used Gheeraerts
to fashion his all-important public image.
The Netherlandish-born Gheeraerts was one of the most
significant painters in England during the age of William Shakespeare.
Indeed the two men were near contemporaries, for the playwright
was born in 1564 (and died in 1616). Comparatively little is known
about the lives and careers of either man, the main evidence being
their extant work.
We can reconstruct Gheeraerts's life only from
fragmentary references, and while he may sometimes have collaborated with other artists, the
organisation of
painters' workshops in London at this period remains
to be established.
The publication, Marcus Gheeraerts II: Elizabethan
Artist, discusses his life and art in detail and includes an
essay on Gheeraerts's painting techniques by Tate Conservator Rica
Jones. The book, which is supported by the Paul Mellon Centre for
Studies in British Art, is published by Tate Publishing (special exhibition
price of £6.99 until 20 April at Tate bookshops).
Further information on the display can be found in
the Collection
Displays and Explore Tate Britain.
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