This latest development occurred to me while reading the first few pages to the catalogue from a 2005 exhibition at the Prado Museum entitled "The Spanish Portrait: From El Greco to Picasso" (and lord, what I would have given to see that show!!). Describing the history of portraiture in Spain, the author raises a few key points (key for me, at least, since I would argue that these issues that relate to the historical portrait are still applicable today in many respects, albeit in more subtle and complex ways):
1. The portrait's early connection to the wealthy and powerful, "who used the greatest artists of their time to propagate their own image", where "portraits were more concerned with the attributes of social or professional status than with individual identity.
2. The portrait's association with idealizing certain modes of behavior and glorifying individuals of a certain "...'quality' who were worthy of imitation".
3. The importance of indicators of wealth or status in portraits, including the sitter's clothing/fashion (I am aware of at least two books discussing this with respect to particular artists: "Fashion and Fancy: Dress and Meaning in Rembrandt's Paintings" by Marieke de Winkel, as well as "Whistler, Women and Fashion" by Margaret F. MacDonald).
4. The tense relationship between fiction versus reality in image-making.
And I only read up to page 25. And although it's all just about the portrait, the themes that I've been addressing in my work are all there. Which gives me a new-found confidence that I am on the right track. And all those (new and improved) paintings that I've been planning are finally ready to go. Giddyup.