Renaissance Watercolours

Delightful exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum of watercolours from the Renaissance.

Watercolour was an unusual medium in this period but was widely used by manuscript illuminators and miniaturists as well as by other artists to enable them to sketch outdoors. The show was arranged by topic covering landscape, nature, design and portraits.

Highlights included a rare painting of Nonesuch Palace by Joris Hoefnagel from 1568, Jacques le Moyne de Morgues botanical studies, armour designs by Jacob Halder and Holbein’s miniature of Anne of Cleeves.  

It was a nice touch to include some work from Mughal India particularly their Christian images copied from Western prints. I was amazed to see an Isaac Oliver miniature which had got to India and been mounted in a Mughal painted paper frame.

Closes 8 August 2021

Review

Telegraph


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