For far too long the male protagonists of the
Pre-Raphaelite movement have dominated accounts of this revolution in British
art. This book aims to redress the balance in showing just how engaged and
central women were to the endeavour – as the subjects of the images themselves,
certainly, but also in their production.
Description
When the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (the
‘PRB’) exhibited their first works in 1849 it heralded a revolution in British
art. Styling themselves the ‘Young Painters of England’ this group of young men
aimed to overturn stale Victorian artistic conventions and challenge the
previous generation with their startling colours and compositions.
Think of the images created by William Holman
Hunt, John Everett Millais, Dante Gabriel Rossetti and others in their circle,
however, and it is not men but pale-faced young women with lustrous, tumbling
locks that spring to mind, gazing soulfully from the picture frame or in
dramatic scenes painted in glowing colours. Who were these women? What is known
of their lives and their roles in a movement that, in successive phases,
spanned over half a century?
Some were models, plucked from obscurity to pose
for figures in Pre-Raphaelite paintings, while others were sisters, wives,
daughters and friends of the artists. Several were artists themselves, with
aspirations to match those of the men, sharing the same artistic and social
networks yet condemned by their gender to occupy a separate sphere. Others
inhabited and sustained a male-dominated art world as partners in production,
maintaining households and studios and socialising with patrons. Some were
skilled in the arts of interior decoration, dressmaking, embroidery,
jewellery-making – the fine crafts that formed a supportive tier for the
‘higher’ arts of painting and sculpture. And although their backgrounds and
life-experiences certainly varied widely, all were engaged in creating
Pre-Raphaelite art.
Authors
Jan Marsh is a writer whose books include The
Pre-Raphaelite Circle, Pre-Raphaelite Sisterhood and Black Victorians. She has
published biographies of Elizabeth Siddal, Christina and Dante Gabriel Rossetti
and May Morris, and has co-edited The Collected Letters of Jane Morris.
Peter Funnell is a former curator at the National Portrait Gallery,
London; Charlotte Gere is a curator and co-author of Pre-Raphaelite to Arts and
Crafts Jewellery; Pamela Gerrish Nunn is the author of A Pre-Raphaelite Journey:
The Art of Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale; Alison Smith is Chief Curator at the
National Portrait Gallery, London, and curated the exhibition Pre-Raphaelites:
Victorian Avant-Garde at Tate
Britain.
https://www.npg.org.uk/business/publications/pre-raphaelite-sisters
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