8-5Art

//Prepared by Austin R.// ** During the // Elizabethan era //, all of the arts flourished dramatically, possibly due to the Queen’s love for art. Painting was dominated by portraiture, particularly in the form of miniatures, while elaborate textiles and embroidery prevailed in the decorative arts, and sculpture found its place within the confines of tomb and architectural decoration. Elizabeth took an interest in portraits, guiding artists such as // Nicholas Hilliard // and // Marcus Gheeraerts // in the creation of stylized images of immense elegance, wealth and power. These artists made large-scale, full-length paintings that portrayed the noble class in richly decorative costumes with armor, embroidery, ruffs, hunting gear, weapons, and lace. This artificial and decorative style became characteristic of Elizabethan painting in general.
 * Art and Sculpture in Elizabethan England

In the decorative arts, demand for domestic silver significantly increased during the mid-sixteenth century because of rapid growth in population and subsequent expansion of the middle and upper classes. Silver plates were often decorated with embossed sculptural vegetal forms, fruit, grotesque figures, and strapwork. These intricate designs of foliage and patterning were also applied to suits of armor and domestic textiles embroidered with colored silks and threads of gold and silver.
 * Some of the most famous Elizabethan works of art are miniature paintings. Miniatures came from the tradition of illuminated manuscripts and from Renaissance portrait medals, a revived classical form. It is said that the foreign artist // Hans Holbein //, instructed Hilliard, one of the Queen's favorite artists, in the technique.  Hilliard produced miniatures painted on vellum or ivory or card, and such miniatures often functioned like lockets or cameos.  Intended for private viewing, portrait miniatures were often highly personal and intimate objects that often depicted lovers or mistresses.  Many of the larger court portraits of Elizabeth were based upon Hilliard's miniatures and portraits. **


 * Architecture of the Elizabethan period became expression of wealth and status. Symmetry and ornateness characterized the style of the English // Renaissance //, with tall houses and towers, for example, accented by elaborate gardens and stables. Elizabethan style followed the Tudor style, and was succeeded in the beginning of the 16th century by the purer Italian style introduced by // Inigo Jones //.

**Works Cited**:** · N.A., N.A.. "The Elizabethan Era." //Eras of Elegance//. 16 Apr 2009 . · Laroque, Francois. __The Age of Shakespeare__. Abrams, NY: Thames and Hudson Ltd., 1991.