Saturday, March 12, 2011

More on Renaissance fashion: weddings and textiles

The last two weeks of research have been particularly pleasant as I had the chance to explore a very ladylike theme, fashion. After have gained a general knowledge on female bodily display by considering ladies’ hair, dresses and jewels, I moved into more specific aspects, namely those related to wedding. Such an interest originated from a simple question that my supervisor helped me thinking through: as Botticelli’s Venus and Mars (National Gallery of London) is considered a panel depicted for the celebration of a wedding, are there any wedding-related elements in the painting that indicate this? All my attention was on Venus: is the goddess’ white dress – brooch included - a bridal dress? Is the cushion she is leaning on a symbol/elements connected to Renaissance weddings? The material I took into consideration was great, it made me come up with further questions and opened new paths of research. Here the results of my week en rose.
The dress. I spent a lot of time looking for information on the colour of bridal dresses in Renaissance Italy. Unfortunately I had no luck with published material (btw, suggestions anyone?) and I therefore turned my attention to visual sources. I gathered a few books (eg. Musacchio, J. M. 2009. Art, Marrige and Family) with a ‘gallery’ of paintings made for weddings. Most of those depictions were parts of furniture (wedding chests, wainscoting, lettucci, etc) used to decorate rooms of the newly married couple. I have to admit that the visual material did not bring much luck either. Only a few of those wedding panels represent wedding processions or banquets in the years I am taking into consideration. The majority however depicts scenes taken from classical episodes where women are the focus of the attention but are rarely brides. The most interesting (and exciting) depiction, was pointed out to me in one of the comments to my previous post (Friday 4th March 2011). Rachel (thank you!) noticed that the bride in Botticelli’s The Story of Nastagio degli Onesti (Madrid, Prado. See image below)  is dressed exactly like Venus: white dress and chest brooch. As stated in my previous post another Venus outfit is also very similar to what one of the three Graces in Botticelli’s Primavera is wearing. I pointed out the fact that one of them is not only wearing a white dress but also a chest brooch. After have edited my post last week, I came across the information that one of the three Graces, Charis, was said by Homer to be married to Hephaestus. (Il. xviii. 382.) (a good website for classic myths, gods and goddesses is this one) I find this connection really interesting although I am aware that this is not enough to support the idea of Venus + white dress + brooch = bride.



The cushion. While randomly surfing the net in the (desperate) search of ‘renaissance cushions’, I came across a blog called Italian Needlework (you can view it here). One post in particular caught my attention as it was related to goldwork embroidery on clothing and furnishings in Renaissance Italy. The author of the text cited Elisa Ricci’s Old Italian Laces in which a Renaissance wedding trousseaus was mentioned: in the wedding-trousseau of Elisabetta Gonzaga of Montefeltro (1488) the cushions were of crimson satin with a network of gold and silver [...]. The post also quoted the description of Lucrezia Borgia’s wardrobe (1502) in which two cushions of green velvet with tassels and lace of gold appeared.
Excited for having found references to Renaissance cushions/weddings, I extended my research on the presence of these objects in brides’ dowry. I started with At Home in Renaissance Italy, the catalogue of an extraordinary exhibition that explored the Renaissance home in terms of architecture/domestic interior/furnishing & artworks (Victoria and Albert Museum, London 5 October 2006 – 7 January 2007). Two of the numerous sections of the book are dedicated to marriage and textiles. Pulling some of the information together, I learned that cushions and pillows were often to be found in brides’ trousseau (corredo) like Chiara Sforza’s (1489) in which a large number of domestic furnishing such as mattresses and cushions were included. As the dowry aimed at flaunting the generosity of the bride’s family, object were finely decorated: cushions for instance were covered by expensive cases made of silk, often embellished and enhanced with metal threads. This kind of decoration seems to occur on Venus cushion: a red (silk?) case is enriched with golden threads joined in a floral pattern.
                                      Botticelli, Venus and Mars (detail)
From what I could gathered, cushions, together with clothes, tableware, embroidered linen and many other objects, seem to have been part of brides paraphernalia. If linked to the discourse on dresses, there might (or might not?) be some sort of base to hypothesize that Venus bears the iconographic elements of a bride. Things get a bit complicated when it comes to dresses though. The three examples of white dresses cited earlier are taken from three paintings belonging to same artist (Botticelli). It could be argued that representation of women in white dresses with brooches was a sort of habit for the painter considering, moreover, that the three artworks belongs to the same period (c.1480-85).

Friday, March 4, 2011

Dresses, brooches and hair: approaching Renaissance fashion

I spent the past week looking at Venus and Mars from a different point of view. I felt a bit stuck with all the “provenance thing” so I decided to change my approach and examine aspects of bodily display. My investigation started from Venus who I find intriguing, especially for the plaits that become part of the dress, joint together by a brooch on the chest. I wondered whether the hair, the dress and brooch were typical in Renaissance Florence (perhaps associated with a particular group of people?) and if similar examples could be found in contemporary paintings. I therefore collected some material on the topic that we ladies are so fond of: fashion.

Evelyn Welch’s Art on Edge: Hair and Hands in Renaissance Italy (2008) was a great starting point for my research. In her article she stresses the importance of examining all aspects of bodily display, often ‘mechanism for displaying status and position’, such as the hair, ‘a powerful symbol of individual and group identity’. Comforted by the fact that the study of hair has actually raised some interest in the past, I searched for Florentine terms comparisons that could help me putting in context Venus and her hair. I turned my attention to Virtue and Beauty: Leonardo's 'Ginevra de' Benci' and Renaissance Portraits of Women, the catalogue of an exhibition held at the National Gallery of Washington in 2001 that brought together portraits of wealthy ladies of Renaissance Florence. By flicking through the book I soon realized that Botticelli’s Venus was miles away from those portraits that represented women in profile with their hair gathered up in gorgeous buns, often enriched with veils and jewels.  Jacqueline Herald’s Renaissance Dress in Italy 1400-1500 (1981) offered the perfect guide into the many categories of Renaissance hair accessories: the rete (knotted nets of silk or gold threads which often incorporated pearls and sometimes other gems); strings of jewels like pearls ‘trailed through the loops and twists of real and false hair’; brooches and pendants worn on headdresses. 






Brooches were also used for functional/decorative purposes on dresses. Generally called fermaglio, a brooch was often used to fasten cloaks or worn as a jewel on ladies’ shoulders. Brooches consisted of different parts, normally combining together pendants, pearls and precious stones. They were often offer by the groom to the bride together with her wedding outfit. For instance Marco Parenti (Florence, c.1421-1497) bought the dressing gown of his future wife and added a golden brooch set with two sapphires and three pearls. The various uses of these jewels are witness in paintings. I had hard time trying to identify a ‘chest brooch’ like the one Venus is wearing. One is worn by one of the three Grazie in the Primavera although the shape differs from Venus’. A very similar looking brooch is places on the hat of Isabella d’Este in Titian’s portrait but I doubt there is any connection with Venus as Titian’s is a much later painting. All the other brooches I could found are placed on ladies’ shoulders or head (eg. Filippo Lippi, Potrait of a man and woman, Metropolitan Museum NY here)
                             


I also did not have much luck with dresses. Elaborate display clothing for women became essential in public in order to display their virtue and their husband’s wealth (who would have paid for the dresses). According to Frick’s study, Florentine families saw their clothes as one of the most meaningful aspects of their identity and spent a remarkable amount of money on lavish outfits that they wore in the public streets of city. Once again I turned to contemporary paintings to check ladies dresses and if any relation can be establish with Venus (I’ve looked at chapels such as the Sassetti and Tornabuoni). The goddess dress seems to be simpler – thin, white layers yet still luxurious with golden details – than the other examples that often present detailed brocade and bright colours.



This is just a simple introduction to Renaissance fashion based on what I could gather from a few readings. I am not in the position (yet) to say whether Botticelli’s Venus portrays a real/ideal woman and if it has any connection with Florentine ladies’ look. So far I have not noticed many similarities. However, as the painting is said to celebrate a wedding, I shall be tackle this aspect further, examine bridal bodily display (accessories, dresses, hair) and consider whether they apply to Venus and Mars. I am now collecting some bibliography and I will update my blog as soon as I gain a better understanding of this new exciting topic. In the meantime any suggestions/thoughts/info will be highly appreciated…