1st Edition

Art and Magic in the Court of the Stuarts

By Vaughan Hart Copyright 1994
280 Pages
by Routledge

284 Pages
by Routledge

280 Pages
by Routledge

Spanning from the inauguration of James I in 1603 to the execution of Charles I in 1649, the Stuart court saw the emergence of a full expression of Renaissance culture in Britain. Hart examines the influence of magic on Renaissance art and how in its role as an element of royal propaganda, art was used to represent the power of the monarch and reflect his apparent command over the hidden forces of... Read more

Introduction ‘The Invisible Lady styled the Magical Sister of the Rosicross’ STUART MAGIC AND THE FAIRY QUEEN, I ‘That triplicity which in great veneration was ascribed to ancient Hermes’ STUART COURT ART AND THE MAGIC OF KINGSHIP II ‘By the might, And magic of his arm’ MASQUES, SERMONS, AND THE PROPHETIC ‘ALBION AND JERUSALEM’ III ‘A peece rather of good Heraldry, than of Architecture’, HERALDRY AND THE ARCHITECTURAL ORDERS AS JOINT EMBLEMS OF THE ‘HOUSE OF BRITISH CHIVALRY’ IV ‘A piece not of Nature, but of Arte’ GARDENS AND THE ILLUSION OF NATURAL MAGIC V ‘Dee in his Mathematicall Preface…the West end of S.Pauls’ ARCHITECTURE AND THE GEOMETRY OF SOLOMON’S TEMPLE VI ‘The lofty tunes of the Diapenthes, Diatessarons, and Diapasons of our Royall Harpe’ MUSICAL HARMONY AND PYTHAGOREAN PALACES VII ‘The body of the King…that glorious Sun’ PROCESSIONS AND STUART LONDON AS THE NEOPLATONIC ‘CITY OF THE SUN’ Epilogue- ‘The heav’n of earth shall have no oddes’, APOCALYPTIC COURT ART AND ALBION’S SECOND RUIN

Biography

Vaughan Hart

`As an architectural historian, Hart brings a unique and illuminating perspective to his study besides providing us with a valuable overview of the subject. Hart's excellent study provides us with n insightful vew of an aspect of seventeenth century cultural wars that helps us understand the ideologicalsignificance of court art as it was manifested in emblematics, techniques of artiical memory, mechanics, and perspective reconstituted by an occult aesthetic.' - Eugene Cunnar 16th Century Jrnl

`Excellent book ... Hart displays his knowledge effectively, and martials his arguments convincingly ... this book is essential reading for those who still persist in describing the architecture of Jones as Palladian, or fail to appreciate that architecture in Britain was once concerned with more than style or pragmatism.' - Robert Tavernor, Architectural Review

"...mind-boggling..." Midweek