Title: Pre-Raphaelite Art
1Pre-Raphaelite Art Artists
- English 315
- Victorian Literature
- University of Richmond
2Many of the images in this presentation were
taken from The Pre-Raphaelite Collection, a
web-site maintained by Julia Kerr. http//www.webm
agick.co.uk/prcoll Other sources include Brian
Yoders Art Gallery http//www.primenet.com/byod
er/art.htm Carol Gertens Fine Art
http//cgfa.kelloggcreek.com/ Thomas Tobins The
Pre-Raphaelite Critic http//www.engl.duq.edu/ser
vus/PR_Critic The Rossetti Archive
http//jefferson.village.virginia.edu/rossetti/ros
setti.html The Web Museum http//metalab.unc.edu/
wm/paint/auth/rossetti/
3The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
- William Holman Hunt, b. 1827
- Dante Gabriel Rossetti, b. 1828
- John Everett Millais, b. 1829
- William Michael Rossetti, b. 1829
- Other members James Collinson, Thomas Woolner,
Fredric George Stephens
4The Immortals
- Jesus
- Shakespeare and the author of Job
- Homer, Dante, Chaucer, Leonardo, Goethe, Keats,
Shelley, King Alfred, Landor, Thackeray, George
Washington, Robert Browning - Others including Elizabeth Barrett Browning,
Boccaccio, Newton, Poe, etc.
5Principles of Royal Academy Art
- Objects drawn with firm, solid outlines
- Composition in S or triangle shape
- Colors subdued, landscape brown
- LightShadow 13 or 14
- All human figures painted free from deformity,
dressed in clean new clothes
6Principles of Pre-Raphaelite Art
- Rejecting the mannered formalism of Academy
Art, of artists following Raphael - Reclaiming an Italian tradition (suggested by
Ruskin) of naturalism - Concern for morality in art
- Mythic/religious/poetic subjects
- Subjects drawn from nature
7Religious Subjects
- Early paintings by the PRB
8John Everett Millais, Christ in the House of his
Parents, 1850
9Dante Gabriel Rossetti, The Girlhood of Mary
Virgin, 1849
10Dante Gabriel Rossetti, The Annunciation, 1850
11William Holman Hunt, The Light of the World,
1853
12William Holman Hunt, The Scapegoat, 1854-55
13William Holman Hunt, The Awakening Conscience,
1853
14Literary Subjects The Lady of Shalott
The Lady was a favorite subject of Pre-Raphaelite
artists and others inspired by the PRB. Nina
Auerbach notes that Tennysons poem explored the
mind of a woman/artist these paintings make her
an object of art.
15William Holman Hunt, The Lady of Shalott,
1889-92
16John William Waterhouse, The Lady of Shalott,
1888
17Sidney Harold Meteyard, The Lady of Shalott
18More Literary Subjects Ophelia
Ophelia is also a favorite subject of many of the
PRB. In some versions, she is strikingly like
Tennysons Lady.
19Arthur Hughes, Ophelia, 1852
20John Everett Millais, Ophelia, 1852. The model
is Elizabeth Siddal.
21Dante Gabriel Rossetti, The First Madness of
Ophelia, 1864
22John William Waterhouse, Ophelia, 1894
23Rossetti on Women
Two of Rossettis favorite models were his
mistress, fianceé, and later wife, Elizabeth
Siddal, and the wife of his friend William
Morris, Jane Morris (neé Burdon). Other favorites
were Annie Miller (seen in his friend Holman
Hunts painting, The Awakening Conscience), and
Fanny Cornforth (Found, La Ghirlandata, and
many others).
24Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Found (unfinished), 1854
25'There is a budding morrow in midnight'- So
sang our Keats, our English nightingale. And
here, as lamps across the bridge turn pale In
London's smokeless resurrection-light, Dark
breaks to dawn. But o'er the deadly blight Of
Love deflowered and sorrow of none avail, Which
makes this man gasp and this woman quail, Can
day from darkness ever again take flight? Ah!
gave not these two hearts their mutual pledge,
Under one mantle sheltered 'neath the hedge In
gloaming courtship? And, O God! to-day He only
knows he hold her - but what part Can life now
take? She cries in her locked heart, - "Leave
me - I do not know you - go away!"
26Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Elizabeth Siddal, 1854
27Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Elizabeth Siddal, 1854
28In an Artists Studio, Christina Rossetti,
1856/1896 One face looks out from all his
canvases, One selfsame figure sits or walks or
leans We found her hidden just behind those
screens, That mirror gave back all her
loveliness. A queen in opal or in ruby dress, A
nameless girl in freshest summer-greens, A
saint, an angel --every canvas means The same
one meaning, neither more nor less. He feeds upon
her face by day and night, And she with true
kind eyes looks back on him Fair as the moon and
joyful as the light Not wan with waiting, not
with sorrow dim Not as she is, but was when hope
shone bright Not as she is, but as she fills his
dream.
29Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Pen sketch of Jane
Burdon, later Morris, 1858
30Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Mariana, 1870
31John Everett Millais, Mariana, 1851
32Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Water Willow, 1871
33Dante Gabriel Rossetti, The Daydream
34Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Proserpine, 1874
35Afar away the light that brings cold cheer Unto
this wall, - one instant and no more Admitted
at my distant palace-door. Afar the flowers of
Enna from this drear Dire fruit, which, tasted
once, must thrall me here. Afar those skies
from this Tartarean grey That chills me and
afar, how far away, The nights that shall be
from the days that were. Afar from mine own
self I seem, and wing Strange ways in thought,
and listen for a sign And still some heart
unto some soul doth pine, Whose sounds mine
inner sense is fain to bring, Continually
together murmuring, - "Woe's me for thee,
unhappy Proserpine!"
36Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Astarte Syriaca, 1877
37Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Boca Baciata, 1859
38Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Venus Verticordia,
1864-1868
39Dante Gabriel Rossetti, The Beloved (The
Bride), 1865-66
40Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Lady Lilith
41Dante Gabriel Rossetti, La Ghirlandata, 1873
42Dante Gabriel Rossetti, The Blessed Damozel,
1875-78