Peter Davidson
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Gentileschi and the ancestors
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This chapter advances a simple and radically different reading of Orazio Gentileschi’s painting The Finding of Moses (now National Gallery), painted in the early 1630s for Henrietta Maria’s Queen’s House at Greenwich. It identifies the true focus of the painting as the daughter of Pharaoh, held by traditional Scottish historiography to be the ancestor of the Stuarts, and thus the ancestor of the newborn Charles II. This trope is traced in detail from the Middle Ages. The conclusion is that the iconography of the room is of a Stuart golden age, and also that the message of Gentileschi’s ceiling of The Arts of Peace, related to contemporary masques.

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Relics, dreams, voyages

World baroque

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