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Known as the "Ditchley Portrait," this stylized depiction of Elizabeth I at age 59 was painted by artist Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger c. 1592.
Take the “Ditchley Portrait” of Elizabeth I. Shown with her feet planted on a map, she stands on southern England, with places beneath her toes like Hamptonia, Oxonium and Middlesexia, to name ...
The portrait of the seminal Tudor monarch was painted around 1592 by Flemish artist Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, and is known as the Ditchley Portrait, ...
It’s this likeness, on loan from National Museums Liverpool, that stands across from The Ditchley Portrait of Elizabeth at the Met. The making of Edward VI, a king in miniature.
Sir Keir Starmer has taken down portraits of Elizabeth I and Sir Walter Raleigh that were on display in Downing Street, The Telegraph can reveal. The paintings of the last Tudor monarch and the ...
The most famous example is Marcus Gheeraert’s The Ditchley Portrait from around 1592, but this unknown follower’s version tells a much less idealized story, giving Elizabeth a startlingly ...
According to the Government Art Collection (GAC) website, this work was “painted after a larger, more elaborate portrait, once in the collection at Ditchley House in Oxfordshire”.