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    Van Dyck’s Genoese Nobles: Two Portraits in Context

    Van Dyck’s Genoese Nobles by Peacock, John;

    Two Portraits in Context

    Series: Brill’s Studies on Art, Art History, and Intellectual History; 85;

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    Product details:

    • Edition number 1
    • Publisher BRILL
    • Date of Publication 8 July 2026

    • ISBN 9789004510869
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages268 pages
    • Size 235x155 mm
    • Weight 1 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 7 Illustrations, black & white; 46 Illustrations, color
    • 700

    Categories

    Short description:

    A study of two major aristocratic portraits which Van Dyck painted during his residence in Genoa in the 1620s, using the meanings specific to each image and the contrasts between them to expound the distinctive and shifting ideas about nobility and its prerogatives entertained by the Genoese patriciate.

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    Long description:

    The aristocratic portraits painted by Van Dyck in the Republic of Genoa during the 1620s have become famous as definitively charismatic images of a ruling elite, the Genoese nobility being constitutionally defined as the governing class of the state. From the earliest written accounts of them a generic, collective appeal has been ascribed to these prepotently glamorous images, glossing over the specific meanings which any individual image might express. This study of two principal portraits uses their contrasting significances to expound the tension between established and shifting ideas of nobility which informed the thinking and behaviour of the Genoese patriciate, and of which Van Dyck shows perceptive awareness.

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    Table of Contents:

    Acknowledgements

    List of Illustrations

    Abbreviations Used in the Notes



    1 Introduction



    2 Nobility in Genoa

     1 Maritime Enterprise and Metropolitan Government

     2 Nobility and Commerce: Practice and Theory

     3 Finance and Feudal Lordship

     4 Picturing Genoese Nobility



    3 Expounding Elena Grimaldi

     1 A Regal Nobility

     2 Palace and Villa: Civility and Nature

     3 The Reciprocal Gaze: Theatre and Scene

     4 The Palatial Scrutiny

     5 The Look of the Villa

     6 Liberty and Loftiness

     7 The Nature of Nobility



    4 The Prospect of Anton Giulio Brignole Sale

     1 The House of Brignole: Its Rise and Its Future

     2 Towards a Palazzo Brignole Sale?

     3 The Feudal Landscape

     4 Spanish Dominance: between Culture and Politics

     5 Formality and Informality

     6 Nobility, Lineage and savoir vivre

     7 Picturing Lineage: Past, Present, Future

     8 The Noble Man of Letters

     9 A Newer Kind of Nobility



    5 New Identities: the Patrician between Courtier and Prince

     1 Nobility and the Courtier

     2 Castiglione ‘Genovese’?

     3 The Evolution of sprezzatura

     4 Mutations of sprezzatura

     5 Courtiers, Princely Rulers and the Republic of Genoa

     6 Courtiers and Nobles

     7 Sprezzatura for Academicians

     8 The sprezzatura of the Cavalier

     9 Chivalry, Culture and Politics

     10 The Idea of a Princely Oligarch



    6 Afterword: Noble Potraiture as ‘History’

    Bibliography

    Index

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