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Armada Portrait : ウィキペディア英語版
Armada Portrait

The ''Armada Portrait'' of Elizabeth I of England is the name of any of three surviving versions of an allegorical panel painting depicting the Tudor queen surrounded by symbols of imperial majesty against a backdrop representing the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588.
==Iconography==
The combination of a life-sized portrait of the queen with a horizontal format is "quite unprecedented in her portraiture",〔Strong 1987, ''Gloriana'', p. 130–133〕 although allegorical portraits in this format, such as the ''Family of Henry VIII: An Allegory of the Tudor Succession'' (1572) attributed to Lucas de Heere,〔Hearn, ''Dynasties'', p. 81〕 pre-date the ''Armada Portrait''.
English art in this period was isolated from trends in Catholic Italy, and owed more to Flemish manuscript illumination and heraldic representation than to Renaissance ideas of unity in time and space in art. The ''Armada Portrait'' is no exception: the chair to the right is viewed from two different angles, as are the tables on the left, and the background shows two different stages in the defeat of the Armada.〔 In the background view on the left, English fireships threaten the Spanish fleet, and on the right the ships are driven onto a rocky coast amid stormy seas by the "Protestant Wind". On a secondary level, these images show Elizabeth turning her back on storm and darkness while sunlight shines where she gazes, iconography that would be repeated in Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger's 1592 of the queen.〔
The queen's hand rests on a globe below the crown of England, "her fingers covering the Americas, indicating England's dominion of the seas and plans for imperialist expansion in the New World".〔Hearn, ''Dynasties'', p. 88〕〔Andrew Belsey and Catherine Belsey, "Icons of Divinity: Portraits of Elizabeth I" in Gent and Llewellyen, ''Renaissance Bodies'', p. 11–35〕 The Queen is flanked by two columns behind, probably a reference to the famous impresa of the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, Philip's father, which represented the pillars of Hercules.〔Roy Strong; ''Art and Power; Renaissance Festivals 1450–1650'',p 51, 1984, The Boydell Press;ISBN 0-85115-200-7〕
Andrew Belsey and Catherine Belsey have pointed out the striking geometry of the painting, with the repeating patterns of circles and arches described by the crown, the globe, and the sleeves, ruff, and gown worn by the queen.〔 They also contrast the imperial figure of the Virgin Queen wearing the large pearl symbolizing chastity suspended from her bodice and the mermaid carved on the chair of state, representing female wiles luring sailors to their doom. The crown also symbolises the English monarch.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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