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Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > 1800 to 1900 > Pre-Raphaelite art
Explores the development of the Pre-Raphaelite movement in the mid
19th century; and works which figure amongst the most lasting and
generally propular in British art. Renowned writer and art critic
Edward Lucie-Smith contributes a study of the individual artists,
their interconnection and previously unpublished material of their
intricate links with the social establishment of the time. James
Cahill has a special interest in the movement, having studied Dante
Gabriel Rosetti and Holman Hunt. He reviews the major exhibition of
150 works at Tate Britain launched in September 2012. 'I think what
I want to do is to follow a trail that leads, through many twists
and turns, from the religious revival of the early 19th century to
Blue Period Picasso, then to Surrealism. It may take in the
Children of the Raj and the discovery of Japan along the way. It
leads from rather rigid moralism, to conscious immoralism, and then
at last to Freud/Dali.' Edward Lucie-Smith 05/2012
Built between 1855 and 1860, Oxford University Museum of Natural
History is the extraordinary result of close collaboration between
artists and scientists. Inspired by John Ruskin, the architect
Benjamin Woodward and the Oxford scientists worked with leading
Pre-Raphaelite artists on the design and decoration of the
building. The decorative art was modelled on the Pre-Raphaelite
principle of meticulous observation of nature, itself indebted to
science, while individual artists designed architectural details
and carved portrait statues of influential scientists. The entire
structure was an experiment in using architecture and art to
communicate natural history, modern science and natural theology.
'Temple of Science' sets out the history of the campaign to build
the museum before taking the reader on a tour of art in the museum
itself. It looks at the facade and the central court, with their
beautiful natural history carvings and marble columns illustrating
different geological strata, and at the pantheon of scientists.
Together they form the world's finest collection of Pre-Raphaelite
sculpture. The story of one of the most remarkable collaborations
between scientists and artists in European art is told here with
lavish illustrations.
Gerard Manley Hopkins initially planned to become a poet-artist.
For five years he trained his eye, learned about contemporary art
and architecture, and made friends in the Pre-Raphaelite circle. In
her fascinating and beautifully illustrated book, Catherine
Phillips, whose knowledge of Hopkins's poems is second to none,
uses letters, new archival material, and contemporary publications
to reconstruct the visual world Hopkins knew between 1862 and 1889,
and especially in the 1860s, with its illustrated journals, art
exhibitions, Gothic architecture, photographic shows, and changing
art criticism.
Phillips identifies three artistic contexts for the Hopkins's
life: his childhood circle of artistic relatives who were important
in shaping his early vision; his friends at university and the
criticism he absorbed while there that inflected his view as a
young man; and the mature religious beliefs which came to govern
his understanding of a visual world interconnected with an eternal
one.
With chapters devoted to Hopkins own drawings, and to visual
theories of the time, Phillips is able to suggests fresh links
between this visual world and the startling originality of
Hopkins's mature writing that will impact radically on our
understanding of Hopkins's practice as a poet.
Drawing on recent theoretical developments in gender and men's
studies, Pre-Raphaelite Masculinities shows how the ideas and
models of masculinity were constructed in the work of artists and
writers associated with the Pre-Raphaelite movement. Paying
particular attention to the representation of non-normative or
alternative masculinities, the contributors take up the multiple
versions of masculinity in Dante Gabriel Rossetti's paintings and
poetry, masculine violence in William Morris's late romances,
nineteenth-century masculinity and the medical narrative in Ford
Madox Brown's Cromwell on His Farm, accusations of 'perversion'
directed at Edward Burne-Jones's work, performative masculinity and
William Bell Scott's frescoes, the representations of masculinity
in Pre-Raphaelite illustration, aspects of male chastity in poetry
and art, TannhAuser as a model for Victorian manhood, and
masculinity and British imperialism in Holman Hunt's The Light of
the World. Taken together, these essays demonstrate the
far-reaching effects of the plurality of masculinities that pervade
the art and literature of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.
![Edward Burne-Jones (Paperback): Penelope Fitzgerald](//media.loot.co.za/images/x80/284147675136179215.jpg) |
Edward Burne-Jones
(Paperback)
Penelope Fitzgerald; Introduction by Frances Spalding
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Penelope Fitzgerald, the Booker Prize-winning author of 'Offshore'
and 'The Blue Flower', turns her attention to the remarkable life
of the Pre-Raphaelite artist Edward Burne-Jones. 'I mean by a
picture a beautiful, romantic dream of something that never was,
never will be, in a light better than any light that ever shone -
in a land no one can define or remember, only desire' Edward
Burne-Jones Edward Burne-Jones (1833-1898) was the prototypical
pre-Raphaelite but with a truly individual sensibility. Penelope
Fitzgerald's delightful biography charts his life from humble
beginnings in Birmingham as the son of an unsuccessful framer,
through a transformative period at Oxford, where he met his close
friend and collaborator William Morris, and on to the
apprenticeship with Dante Gabriel Rossetti that would shape his
artistic vision. His work harks back to an Arthurian England - an
Arcadia that offered solace against the onset of the Industrial
Revolution, and on a deeply personal level provided respite from
his ever-present melancholia. This is an illuminating portrait of a
fascinating figure - artistic genius, doting father, troubled
husband - written with all Penelope Fitzgerald's characteristic
sympathy and insight.
Fanny Cornforth was a Victorian supermodel whose face epitomised
the vision and life of the Pre-Raphaelite artist Dante Gabriel
Rossetti. In their twenty-five years together, she played many
parts from muse, medium and lover to housekeeper and nurse. Due to
her care of the artist, he was able to create some of the best
known and celebrated art works of the nineteenth century, however
at his death Fanny became an outcast, accused of stealing, lying
and even murder. Her journey from rural poverty to celebrated
beauty gave her a life she could never have dreamed of, but her
choice of love above security saw her end her days in an asylum.
Her afterlife, in the imagination of those who knew her and those
that followed saw her cast as a villainess; Rossetti's folly, an
illiterate prostitute who could crack walnut shells in her teeth.
It's finally time that the truth is separated from the swirl of
lies and that the life of one of the most infamous women of
Bohemian London is told, from canvas to asylum.
A wide-ranging collection of essays written for the William Morris
Society exploring the various intersections between the life, work
and achievements of William Morris (1834-1896) and that of John
Ruskin (1819-1900). Subjects covered include Ruskin's connection
with the Pre-Raphaelite movement, the promotion of craft skills and
meaningful work, Morris and the division of labour, Ruskin's
engagement with education and the environment, Ruskin and the art
and architecture of Red House, the parallels between Ruskin's
support for Laxey Mill and Morris's Merton Abbey Works, the
illustrated manuscript and the contrasts between Ruskin's Tory
paternalism and Morris's revolutionary socialism. The book includes
articles first published in The Journal of William Morris Studies
between 1977 and 2012 and new pieces written especially for this
volume. Ruskin's beliefs had a profound and lasting impact on
Morris who wrote, upon first reading Ruskin whilst at Oxford
University, that his views offered a "new road on which the world
should travel" - a road that led Morris to social and political
change.
The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood was a group of radical young artists
who banded together in London in 1848. This book explores the vital
role played by drawing and design in the work of the Brotherhood
and their associates and followers. Alongside nudes and figure
studies are the group s portraits, self-portraits, and caricatures
that were often exchanged as gifts between friends; delicate
studies of nature by John Ruskin and John Brett; scenes derived
from religious, literary, and medieval sources; captivating studies
of the iconic Pre-Raphaelite models Lizzie Siddal and Jane Morris;
and original designs for stained glass, textiles, and ceramics. The
book explores the full variety of Pre-Raphaelite drawing and
demonstrates the impact that it had on turn-of-the-century British
art movements such as Aestheticism, Symbolism, and Art Nouveau.
Illustrated with the most important Pre-Raphaelite drawings from
public and private collections in Britain including striking works
by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William Holman Hunt, and Edward Burne-
Jones that have never before been exhibited or reproduced it offers
an intimate look into the enchanting world of the Pre-Raphaelites.
This vibrant collection of essays claims that a complex network of
texts by critics, biographers and diarists established the
credibility and influence of the Pre-Raphaelite movement.
Throughout the twentieth century, Modernist taste failed to
acknowledge the achievement of oppositional groupings such as the
Pre-Raphaelites. The essays collected here, however, reveal that
the British group anticipated later avant-gardes by using the
written word to configure for itself a radical artistic identity.
Public and critics alike were scandalized by the radicalism of
Pre-Raphaelite painting, its unflinching portrayal of historical
figures and of contemporary life, and its irreverent attitude to
artistic convention. Pre-Raphaelitism's innovations were not
confined to style: new forms of artistic identity and behaviour
were explored. As the contributors interrogate the texts through
which Pre-Raphaelitism was constructed, they demonstrate that the
movement's wide influence as a cultural phenomenon derived from the
interplay between exhibited works and critical discourse. Applying
a range of sophisticated methodologies from the fields of literary
studies, art history, and cultural studies, these interdisciplinary
essays uncover the neglected role of texts in the success of the
Pre-Raphaelite rebellion and argue in favor of a new centrality for
this movement in the history of nineteenth-century European
culture.
This book argues that Ford Madox Brown's murals in the Great Hall
of Manchester Town Hall (1878-93) were the most important public
art works of their day. Brown's twelve designs on the history of
Manchester, remarkable exercises in the making of historical
vision, were semi-forgotten by academics until the 1980s, partly
because of Brown's unusually muscular conception of what history
painting should set out to achieve. This ground-breaking book
explains the thinking behind the programme and indicates how each
mural contributes to a radical vision of social and cultural life.
It shows the important link between Brown and Thomas Carlyle, the
most iconoclastic of Victorian intellectuals, and reveals how Brown
set about questioning the verities of British liberalism. -- .
This is a fundamental reassessment of the work of William Holman
Hunt, and the first critical text to reproduce his pictures in
colour and set him on an international stage. Introducing a new
critique of the autobiography and drawing on hundreds of private
letters, drawings and paintings, the author depicts a radical man
of his times, deeply troubled by the pivotal concerns of the
materialist age - the isolation of the individual, the collapse of
faith and the status of art - and seeking solutions through a
systematic testing of the extremes of painting. A close examination
of the pictures, including neglected later works, combined with
recent scientific research relate the physical act of painting, and
the paint, back to the body of the artist. Lavishly illustrated and
engagingly written, this book answers the longstanding lack of any
monograph on Hunt and will make compelling reading for
undergraduate and graduate students of History of Art, Victorian
Studies, English Literature and Religious Studies, as well as
curators, conservators and the artist's many admirers. -- .
Oxford has a special place in the history of Pre-Raphaelitism.
Thomas Combe (superintendent of the Clarendon Press) encouraged
John Everett Millais and William Holman Hunt at a crucial early
stage of their careers, and his collection became the nucleus of
the Ashmolean collection of works by the Brotherhood and their
associates. Two young undergraduates, William Morris and Edward
Burne-Jones, saw the Combe collection and became enthusiastic
converts to the movement. With Dante Gabriel Rossetti, in 1857 they
undertook the decoration of the debating chamber (now the Old
Library) of the Oxford Union. The group's champion John Ruskin also
studied in Oxford, where he oversaw the design of the University
Museum of Natural History and established the Ruskin School of
Drawing. Jane Burden, future wife of Morris and muse (probably also
lover) of Rossetti, was a local girl, first spotted at the theatre
in Oxford. Oxford's key role in the movement has made it a magnet
for important bequests and acquisitions, most recently of
Burne-Jones's illustrated letters and paintbrushes. The collection
of watercolours and drawings includes a wide variety of appealing
works, from Hunt's first drawing on the back of a tiny envelope for
The Light of the World (Keble College), to large, elaborate chalk
drawings of Jane Morris by Rossetti. It is especially rich in
portraits, which throw an intimate light on the friendships and
love affairs of the artists, and in landscapes which reflect
Ruskin's advice to 'go to nature'. More than just an exhibition
catalogue, this book is a showcase of the Ashmolean's incredible
collection, and demonstrates the enormous range of Pre-Raphaelite
drawing techniques and media, including pencil, pen and ink, chalk,
watercolour, bodycolour and metallic paints. It will include
designs for stained glass and furniture, as well as preparatory
drawings for some of the well-known paintings in the collection.
This vibrant collection of essays claims that a complex network of
texts by critics, biographers and diarists established the
credibility and influence of the Pre-Raphaelite movement.
Throughout the twentieth century, Modernist taste failed to
acknowledge the achievement of oppositional groupings such as the
Pre-Raphaelites. The essays collected here, however, reveal that
the British group anticipated later avant-gardes by using the
written word to configure for itself a radical artistic identity.
Public and critics alike were scandalized by the radicalism of
Pre-Raphaelite painting, its unflinching portrayal of historical
figures and of contemporary life, and its irreverent attitude to
artistic convention. Pre-Raphaelitism's innovations were not
confined to style: new forms of artistic identity and behaviour
were explored. As the contributors interrogate the texts through
which Pre-Raphaelitism was constructed, they demonstrate that the
movement's wide influence as a cultural phenomenon derived from the
interplay between exhibited works and critical discourse. Applying
a range of sophisticated methodologies from the fields of literary
studies, art history, and cultural studies, these interdisciplinary
essays uncover the neglected role of texts in the success of the
Pre-Raphaelite rebellion and argue in favor of a new centrality for
this movement in the history of nineteenth-century European
culture.
A light-hearted account of an improbable side of Victorian England,
this history tells of the pet wombat owned by Pre-Raphaelite
painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti and the late-19th century fad of
owning Australian animals as pets. This examination also looks at
the way a wombat participated in the delicate relationships between
the men and women in the Pre-Raphaelite circle--particularly
Rossetti's emotional affair with Jane Morris, wife of his friend
and colleague William. Fully illustrated with drawings and etchings
of the period, this work will appeal to those with an interest in
Victorian England, the Pre-Raphaelites, as well as wombat lovers
the world over.
Alternately praised as "an American original" and lampooned as
an arbiter of kitsch, the regionalist painter Thomas Hart Benton
has been the subject of myriad monographs and journal articles,
remaining almost as controversial today as he was in his own time.
Missing from this literature, however, is an understanding of the
profound ways in which sound figures in the artist's enterprises.
Prolonged attention to the sonic realm yields rich insights into
long-established narratives, corroborating some but challenging and
complicating at least as many. A self-taught and frequently
performing musician who invented a harmonica tablature notation
system, Benton was also a collector, cataloguer, transcriber, and
distributor of popular music. In Thomas Hart Benton and the
American Sound, Leo Mazow shows that the artist's musical imagery
was part of a larger belief in the capacity of sound to register
and convey meaning. In Benton's pictorial universe, it is through
sound that stories are told, opinions are voiced, experiences are
preserved, and history is recorded.
Drawing on recent theoretical developments in gender and men's
studies, Pre-Raphaelite Masculinities shows how the ideas and
models of masculinity were constructed in the work of artists and
writers associated with the Pre-Raphaelite movement. Paying
particular attention to the representation of non-normative or
alternative masculinities, the contributors take up the multiple
versions of masculinity in Dante Gabriel Rossetti's paintings and
poetry, masculine violence in William Morris's late romances,
nineteenth-century masculinity and the medical narrative in Ford
Madox Brown's Cromwell on His Farm, accusations of 'perversion'
directed at Edward Burne-Jones's work, performative masculinity and
William Bell Scott's frescoes, the representations of masculinity
in Pre-Raphaelite illustration, aspects of male chastity in poetry
and art, TannhAuser as a model for Victorian manhood, and
masculinity and British imperialism in Holman Hunt's The Light of
the World. Taken together, these essays demonstrate the
far-reaching effects of the plurality of masculinities that pervade
the art and literature of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.
The group of young painters and writers who coalesced into the
Pre-Raphaelite movement in the middle years of the nineteenth
century became hugely influential in the development not only of
literature and painting, but also more generally of art and design.
Though their reputation has fluctuated over the years, their
achievements are now recognised and their style enjoyed and studied
widely. This volume explores the lives and works of the central
figures in the group: among others, the Rossettis, William Holman
Hunt, John Everett Millais, Ford Madox Brown, William Morris and
Edward Burne-Jones. This is the first book to provide a general
introduction to the Pre-Raphaelite movement that integrates its
literary and visual art forms. The Companion explains what made the
Pre-Raphaelite style unique in painting, poetry, drawing and prose.
" ... The author's personal, beautiful, and discursive style will
appeal to enthusiasts of art and English literature." Library
Journal One of the greatest literary artists in history, Ford Madox
Ford's childhood is brought to life in this collection of anecdotes
from his many memoirs. Ford Madox Ford, best known today for
Parade's End and The Good Soldier, was also a very fine memoirist.
The grandson of Ford Madox Brown, he grew up surrounded by all the
great figures of Victorian artistic life, whom he saw with the
unflinching eye of a child. This collection brings together some of
his most evocative, witty, and tender memories of an extraordinary
youth. There are rich anecdotes about the Rossettis, Brown, Morris,
Burne Jones, Ruskin, Oscar Wilde, Leighton, Swinburne, the
accomplished con-man Charles Augustus Howell, and many of the minor
but no less vivid characters that made up the bohemian life of
London in the second half of the 19th century. Ford's elegiac but
always penetrating prose is a constant delight, and his comic
timing invariably immaculate. Selected from Ford's many volumes of
memoirs (all now out of print), this is a superb and very funny
introduction to one of the great periods of English art and poetry
by a great writer at the very heart of all that was old and all
that was new.
A wide-ranging collection of essays written for the William Morris
Society exploring the various intersections between the life, work
and achievements of William Morris (1834-1896) and that of John
Ruskin (1819-1900). Subjects covered include Ruskin's connection
with the Pre-Raphaelite movement, the promotion of craft skills and
meaningful work, Morris and the division of labour, Ruskin's
engagement with education and the environment, Ruskin and the art
and architecture of Red House, the parallels between Ruskin's
support for Laxey Mill and Morris's Merton Abbey Works, the
illustrated manuscript and the contrasts between Ruskin's Tory
paternalism and Morris's revolutionary socialism. The book includes
articles first published in The Journal of William Morris Studies
between 1977 and 2012 and new pieces written especially for this
volume. Ruskin's beliefs had a profound and lasting impact on
Morris who wrote, upon first reading Ruskin whilst at Oxford
University, that his views offered a "new road on which the world
should travel" - a road that led Morris to social and political
change.
More than an index to the nine volumes of letters, this volume is a
concise guide to an entire cultural era seen through the lens of
Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Volume 10 of The Correspondence of Dante
Gabriel Rossetti is the first ever analytical and biographical
index to all Rossetti's letters from 1835-82. It gives readers the
widest possible contextual access to all names of persons, places,
works of art, writings, movements, organizations and activities,
both physical and intellectual, mentioned in these letters with
their annotations and appendices. But this index, augmenting the
partial ones in Vols2 and 5, is far more than a simple listing of
names: it also serves as a subject index, providing mini-precis
descriptions of the information detailed in the annotated letter
texts. Subheadings within entries depend on the complexity of the
subject and may include letters to/from (for recipients) and lists
of artistic and literary works by Rossetti's correspondents, or
predecessors such as Blake, Keats and Coleridge. It is a concise
guide to an entire cultural era. Since Rossetti is the lens through
which all other entries are filtered, his own entry is divided into
multiple subheadings to facilitate easy access. The researcher can
quickly locate all references to the sonnet sequence The House of
Life, the various versions of the Proserpine picture or the complex
relationship of his drug use to Rossetti's life and work.
Claude Monet’s Water Lilies are widely recognized as a
celebration of nature and a call to visual experience. The skilled
brushwork, vivid color, and immersive quality of the paintings
suspend thoughts of the outside world and its concerns. And yet,
when one realizes that these works were made during a period of
social and political turmoil—rapid changes of government, the
Dreyfus Affair, and the destruction and devastation of World War
I—questions arise about the personal, cultural, and historical
contexts within which they were created. In this book, James H.
Rubin explores these conditions and shows how Monet’s work—said
to be a harbinger of abstraction—appeals not only to the eye but
also to something deep in modern consciousness. The myth of
Impressionism is that it was reviled and misunderstood, but by the
1890s Monet was rich by anyone’s standards, and his works were
considered French cultural treasures. Monet was featured in a
propaganda film in response to German militarism, and he was
persuaded by Georges Clemenceau to donate a number of his Water
Lilies paintings to the French nation following the Treaty of
Versailles. Taking this into account, Rubin uncovers how the theme
of floating lily pads could serve political ends, exposing
relationships between Monet’s apparently subject-free art and its
material circumstances in the modern world. Engagingly written,
masterfully argued, and featuring more than 150 illustrations, Why
Monet Matters is a major study of an artist who had the will and
the talent to remain relevant to his time without conceding to its
fashions. Scholars, students, and those who appreciate Monet and
Impressionism will value and learn from this book.
The first full edition of the correspondence, between three artists
Joanna Boyce, her brother George P. Boyce and Henry Wells, who she
eventually married. It dates from the period 1845 to 1861, and
covers artistic life in both Paris and London, including the
Pre-Raphaelites. This correspondence, between three artists Joanna
Boyce, her brother George P. Boyce and Henry Wells, whom she
eventually married, dates from the period 1845 to 1861. They were
all friends of Rossetti and the Pre-Raphaelite circle, but in
addition Henry and Joanna both studied in Paris, and Joanna wrote
extensively about her time there, training with Thomas Couture. She
wrote for The Saturday Review as well as painting a small number of
very interesting and much admired pictures. Her brother George
established himself as a successful watercolourist and member of
the Old Watercolour Society, having been encouraged both by David
Cox on his Welsh sketching expeditions,and by Ruskin, whose letters
advising him what to paint in Venice are included here. Henry Wells
was primarily a portrait painter. At first he specialised in
miniatures, and was commissioned to paint Mary, princess of
Cambridge byQueen Victoria. There are vivid accounts of visits to
country houses to carry out commissions from their owners. The
three wrote constantly about techniques of painting and about the
new colours that became available at this period, and about their
visits to exhibitions both in Paris and London. They all
contributed to the Royal Academy and other exhibitions. In
addition, there is the extraordinary story of Joanna's and Henry's
courtship and marriage, at first encouraged and then viciously
opposed by Joanna's recently widowed mother. The correspondence
survives only in an unpublished transcript made in the 1940s, as
the originals were all destroyed in a bombing raid on Bath during
the second world war. Excerpts from George P. Boyce's diaries were
published in the 1930s, but the present edition contains a
considerable amount of new material.
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Pre-Raphaelites
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R468
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Discovery Miles 3 950
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