Legs Fit for a King: Masculinity in the Staging of the Dutch Restoration Monarchy, 1813-1819

<p>This article explores visual strategies of legitimisation deployed in the establishment of the Dutch Restoration monarchy. It asks how these visual strategies were shaped by historically specific notions of masculinity and simultaneously helped shape such notions. Concentrating on the first...

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Main Author: Stefan Dudink
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Journals 2012-03-01
Series:BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
Online Access:https://www.bmgn-lchr.nl/articles/1565
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spelling doaj-c4f63afaa1ad41f9ab7cf8a90c5e91662021-10-02T03:45:30ZengOpen JournalsBMGN: Low Countries Historical Review0165-05052211-28982012-03-011271457110.18352/bmgn-lchr.15651535Legs Fit for a King: Masculinity in the Staging of the Dutch Restoration Monarchy, 1813-1819Stefan Dudink<p>This article explores visual strategies of legitimisation deployed in the establishment of the Dutch Restoration monarchy. It asks how these visual strategies were shaped by historically specific notions of masculinity and simultaneously helped shape such notions. Concentrating on the first state portrait of William I as King by Joseph Paelinck painted in 1818, it argues that this portrait was part of a ‘staging’ of the Dutch Restoration monarchy. In the absence of <em>ancien régime </em>claims to legitimacy, Restoration monarchies needed to have recourse to theatrical means of legitimisation, but also had to make sure not to provoke associations with the theatrical elements inherent in old regime monarchies.</p><p> </p><p>The representation of the King’s body in the state portrait, drawing strongly on neoclassical and revolutionary conventions, invoked notions of masculinity centring around political virtue and naturalness. As such, the King’s body, and the masculinity it represented, helped undo the artificiality associated with monarchy and lent a sense of reality to the staging of the Dutch Restoration monarchy.</p><p> </p>This article is part of the special issue '<a href="/6/volume/127/issue/1/">Low Countries Histories of Masculinity</a>'.https://www.bmgn-lchr.nl/articles/1565
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stefan Dudink
spellingShingle Stefan Dudink
Legs Fit for a King: Masculinity in the Staging of the Dutch Restoration Monarchy, 1813-1819
BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
author_facet Stefan Dudink
author_sort Stefan Dudink
title Legs Fit for a King: Masculinity in the Staging of the Dutch Restoration Monarchy, 1813-1819
title_short Legs Fit for a King: Masculinity in the Staging of the Dutch Restoration Monarchy, 1813-1819
title_full Legs Fit for a King: Masculinity in the Staging of the Dutch Restoration Monarchy, 1813-1819
title_fullStr Legs Fit for a King: Masculinity in the Staging of the Dutch Restoration Monarchy, 1813-1819
title_full_unstemmed Legs Fit for a King: Masculinity in the Staging of the Dutch Restoration Monarchy, 1813-1819
title_sort legs fit for a king: masculinity in the staging of the dutch restoration monarchy, 1813-1819
publisher Open Journals
series BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
issn 0165-0505
2211-2898
publishDate 2012-03-01
description <p>This article explores visual strategies of legitimisation deployed in the establishment of the Dutch Restoration monarchy. It asks how these visual strategies were shaped by historically specific notions of masculinity and simultaneously helped shape such notions. Concentrating on the first state portrait of William I as King by Joseph Paelinck painted in 1818, it argues that this portrait was part of a ‘staging’ of the Dutch Restoration monarchy. In the absence of <em>ancien régime </em>claims to legitimacy, Restoration monarchies needed to have recourse to theatrical means of legitimisation, but also had to make sure not to provoke associations with the theatrical elements inherent in old regime monarchies.</p><p> </p><p>The representation of the King’s body in the state portrait, drawing strongly on neoclassical and revolutionary conventions, invoked notions of masculinity centring around political virtue and naturalness. As such, the King’s body, and the masculinity it represented, helped undo the artificiality associated with monarchy and lent a sense of reality to the staging of the Dutch Restoration monarchy.</p><p> </p>This article is part of the special issue '<a href="/6/volume/127/issue/1/">Low Countries Histories of Masculinity</a>'.
url https://www.bmgn-lchr.nl/articles/1565
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