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Perhaps the most prolific artist of the nineteenth century, Sir
John Gilbert (1817-97) was President of the Royal Watercolour
Society, a regular exhibitor at the Royal Academy and illustrator
for numerous illustrated papers, novels and children's books. Yet
despite his impressive list of achievements, his name has become
lost among figures such as Leighton, Watts, Millais and Burne-Jones
who dominated the Victorian art world of which he was a part.
Re-assessment of Gilbert's contribution to British art history
reveals an artist who created powerful images - strong on
narrative, romantic, illustrative and escapist - that have much to
offer the viewer today. In addition, Gilbert is an interesting
figure, both for what his story can tell us about Victorian taste
and the vagaries of the art market, and because of his unusual
practice of working contemporaneously in oils, watercolour and as
an illustrator; blurring the boundaries between these media and
using them interchangeably. Bringing together a selection of
large-scale historical paintings, modest and rarely seen landscape
watercolours, illustrated novels and children's books, newspaper
illustrations and ephemera from both public and private sources,
this groundbreaking publication explores both an unduly neglected
figure and some important aspects of Victorian life. Offering
first-class, original research, Sir John Gilbert is essential
reading for all those with a particular interest in Victorian art,
literature and society.
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