Jean Brueghel dit de Velours, Vue du Château de Mariemont, 1612. © Musée des Beaux-Arts de Dijon, photo François Jay

Mary of Hungary.
Art & Power in the Renaissance

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  • Royal Museum of Mariemont, Morlanwelz

With Charles V’s rule over a large part of Europe weakening, it became important to secure Philip II’s succession. Here the emperor’s sister Mary of Hungary emerged as a strategist from the very outset, devising and implementing a veritable propaganda programme, including a tour to present the heir to the throne, that would have a lasting impact on art and the dividing lines between European territories.
The exhibition in Mariemont, where she owned a hunting estate, presents the exciting episodes of an imperial succession in which the greater and lesser history of the Renaissance was played out.