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Spend the morning at the Hispanic Society enjoying light refreshments followed by a conversation and private viewing of the exhibition, Spanish Style: Fashion Illuminated, 1550-1700. The event will be a moderated conversation with Amanda Wunder, the curator of the exhibition Spanish Style: Fashion Illuminated, 1550-1700, with a focus on the way the illuminated manuscripts in the show chart the development of fashion in Spain during the 16th and 17th centuries.

Amanda Wunder is professor of History and Art History at the City University of New York (Lehman College and CUNY Graduate Center), and the author of Baroque Seville: Sacred Art in a Century of Crisis (2017) and Spanish Fashion in the Age of Velázquez: A Tailor at the Court of Philip IV (2024).

Exhibition Information:

Spain’s imperial expansion inspired a fashion revolution. Elite clothing incorporated materials from across the Spanish Empire into opulent garments and accessories that radically reshaped the human body. The result was a unique style of dress that defined Spain’s national identity in the 16th and 17th centuries, and that continues to inspire fashion today.

Set in the Hispanic Society’s ornate Renaissance courtyard, this exhibition tells the story of this remarkable era of fashion history through the museum’s rich collections, including royal portraits, sumptuous textiles and jewelry, life-size sculptures, and vibrantly illuminated manuscripts.

The exhibition features sixteen rarely seen manuscript letters of nobility illuminated with miniatures showing men, women, and children dressed in the latest courtly styles. These brilliantly colored family portraits, painted in painstaking detail, reveal how upwardly-mobile families manipulated their appearances and used their clothes to climb the social ladder in the Spanish Empire.

Spanish Style: Fashion Illuminated, 1550-1700 is curated by Amanda Wunder, a specialist on early modern Spanish art and culture, and author of Spanish Fashion in the Age of Velázquez: A Tailor at the Court of Philip IV (2024).

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This DRAWINGS WEEK 2026 event is organized by The Drawing Foundation in partnership with the Hispanic Society Museum and Library and in association with Master Drawings New York 2026.

                              

Image:  “Doña Baltasara Mala de Molina and doña Inés de Valenzuela.” Third issue of a carta ejecutoria de hidalguía petitioned by Francisco and don Luis de Ortega Vallejo, brothers, residents of Valdepeñas, Granada, 6 June 1601, (detail).

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DRAWINGS WEEK 2026 – Fashion in the Hispanic Society’s Collection of Illuminated Manuscripts: A Conversation with Amanda Wunder

Spend the morning at the Hispanic Society enjoying light refreshments followed by a conversation and private viewing of the exhibition, Spanish Style: Fashion Illuminated, 1550-1700. The event will be a moderated conversation with Amanda Wunder, the curator of the exhibition Spanish Style: Fashion Illuminated, 1550-1700, with a focus on the way the illuminated manuscripts in the show chart the development of fashion in Spain during the 16th and 17th centuries.

Amanda Wunder is professor of History and Art History at the City University of New York (Lehman College and CUNY Graduate Center), and the author of Baroque Seville: Sacred Art in a Century of Crisis (2017) and Spanish Fashion in the Age of Velázquez: A Tailor at the Court of Philip IV (2024).

Exhibition Information:

Spain’s imperial expansion inspired a fashion revolution. Elite clothing incorporated materials from across the Spanish Empire into opulent garments and accessories that radically reshaped the human body. The result was a unique style of dress that defined Spain’s national identity in the 16th and 17th centuries, and that continues to inspire fashion today.

Set in the Hispanic Society’s ornate Renaissance courtyard, this exhibition tells the story of this remarkable era of fashion history through the museum’s rich collections, including royal portraits, sumptuous textiles and jewelry, life-size sculptures, and vibrantly illuminated manuscripts.

The exhibition features sixteen rarely seen manuscript letters of nobility illuminated with miniatures showing men, women, and children dressed in the latest courtly styles. These brilliantly colored family portraits, painted in painstaking detail, reveal how upwardly-mobile families manipulated their appearances and used their clothes to climb the social ladder in the Spanish Empire.

Spanish Style: Fashion Illuminated, 1550-1700 is curated by Amanda Wunder, a specialist on early modern Spanish art and culture, and author of Spanish Fashion in the Age of Velázquez: A Tailor at the Court of Philip IV (2024).

__

This DRAWINGS WEEK 2026 event is organized by The Drawing Foundation in partnership with the Hispanic Society Museum and Library and in association with Master Drawings New York 2026.

                              

Image:  “Doña Baltasara Mala de Molina and doña Inés de Valenzuela.” Third issue of a carta ejecutoria de hidalguía petitioned by Francisco and don Luis de Ortega Vallejo, brothers, residents of Valdepeñas, Granada, 6 June 1601, (detail).

Date
February 6, 2026 10:00 am
Venue
Address
613 W 155th St
New York, NY 10032 United States
Rates
Free, Registration Required. Registration for this event is managed by the Hispanic Society Museum & Library.

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