The We Are Bess exhibition aims to reclaim Bess of Hardwick from a 400-year reputation as a greedy power-seeker by juxtaposing the Long Gallery’s existing portraits of (overwhelmingly male) Tudor luminaries with those of exciting, influential women today. “Perhaps my favourite is the Right Hon. Libby Lane, first female bishop of the Church of England,” says Suzannah Lipscomb. “She’s hanging near both Archbishop Thomas Cranmer and Cardinal Reginald Paul, very important clergymen of the 16th century.”
Photographed by Rachel Adams, these women have triumphed over similar prejudices, loss and challenges to those faced by Bess of Hardwick. Libby Lane, for example, has been accused of being manipulative, scheming, self-serving and ambitious, all insults Bess would have recognised. The exhibition aims to set-straight other scores, too. “I like that we have…