Pre-Raphaelites : drawings & watercolours

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Bibliographic Information

Pre-Raphaelites : drawings & watercolours

Christiana Payne ; with essays by Fiona Mann and Robert Wilkes

Ashmolean Museum : University of Oxford, 2021

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Note

Catalog of the exhibition "Pre-Raphaelites: Drawings & Watercolours" held 4 February to 31 May 2021 at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, UK

Includes bibliographical references and index

Contents of Works

  • Introduction: Pre-Raphaelites on paper / Christiana Payne
  • Navigating the 'many botherations of a picture' : the techniques and materials of George Price Boyce, Gabriel Rossetti and Edward Burne-Jones / Fiona Mann
  • Reading and drawing : Pre-Raphaelite sources in English literature / Robert Wilkes
  • Catalogue / Christiana Payne. The Pre-Raphaelite circle : portraits, formal and informal ; Contrasting traditions, media and purposes ; 'Stunners' ; Inspiration from history and literature ; Sketches and studies ; John Ruskin ; Pre-Raphaelite landscapes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

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.

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