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BURGHLEY
 
 


Masterpieces
The Collectors
Exhibitions

2010 Exhibition
Conservation
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Before the invention of photography, portraiture was the only way of recording likenesses of family, friends or famous figures. A property-owning aristocrat would have his family portraits displayed on the walls of his home, both as a record of those close to him and as a demonstration of his lineage.
Giordano was a Neapolitan artist, often described as the most important Italian decorative artist of the second half of the 17th century. He was nicknamed Luca Fa Presto (Luke work quickly) because of his prodigious speed of execution and huge output. John,th Earl of Exeter, greatly admired his style and purchased nine important works from him. During the 17th century, spectacles were a fashionable as well as a practical accessory—the larger the better!
 
Art in Miniature at Burghley

The creation, in 2006, of the Treasury Gallery made possible the display of items from the extensive Burghley Collection that are normally unseen by visitors. The 2010 Treasury exhibition is centred on a selection of exquisite miniature paintings.

Painting in miniature—known as limning—is considered by many to be the highest form of pictorial art. The art of limning became immensely popular amongst the aristocracy of Elizabethan England. Perhaps the most celebrated artist of the genre was Nicholas Hilliard (1547-1619) famous for his stunning portraits of the Queen. However, toward the end of the century, Hilliard’s position as the leading miniaturist in the country was challenged by his former pupil, Isaac Oliver; whose masterpiece, The Three Brothers Browne, a detail of which is shown above, is a centrepiece of this exhibition.

As well as painters, craftsmen in many fields often produced objects on a tiny scale as a demonstration of their skills. The range of objects gathered here to accompany the paintings illustrates this timeless fashion. From tiny ceramics, intricate works in silver and gold filigree, objects of vertu and even scientific instruments, they are all objects of beauty on a small scale.

Of particular interest are the three small jars known as ‘The Buckingham China.’ Recent research and scientific analysis has proved these to be examples of true hard-paste porcelain—made in England some twenty five years before the first production of porcelain by Böttger at Meissen. Once again, a discovery at Burghley causes the history books to be rewritten! For more information please visit our dedicated page.

Burghley House, Stamford, Lincs, PE9 3JY.- Tel: 01780 752451- Email: burghley@burghley.co.uk © Burghley House Preservation Trust Limited Site Map