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E-grāmata: Joanna, George, and Henry: A Pre-Raphaelite Tale of Art, Love and Friendship

  • Formāts: 376 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-May-2012
  • Izdevniecība: The Boydell Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781846159367
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  • Cena: 25,04 €*
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  • Formāts: 376 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-May-2012
  • Izdevniecība: The Boydell Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781846159367

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Letters of three artists closely associated with the Pre-Raphaelites which also give a vivid insight into the dramas of their personal life.

When the transcript of these letters came to light ten years ago, no one could have imagined the drama within. They were family letters: letters from a young woman to her brother and later to her suitor - of interest chiefly because all three were painters, and all were active participants in the youthful Pre-Raphaelite revolution that swept England in the 1850s. At the very least, perhaps, such letters would provide the odd additional insight to a well-trodden story? They turned out to be a revelation - giving not only a comprehensive picture of what it was like to be an artist in the mid-19th century, but containing within them a powerful family drama and a most unusual love story. It is a love story, moreover, told largely from a woman's point of view. Joanna Boyce's suitor, Henry Wells, was an accomplished miniaturist when he first met George Boyce on a sketching holiday in Wales. George was struggling to become a water-colourist. His sister, five years younger, champed at his heels - already a dedicated painter who had convinced herself that she could not combine being a serious artist with being a wife and mother. This did not stop Henry falling in love with her, and during their protracted on-off engagement, they continued to correspond with each other, thus incurring the wrath of Joanna's mother. Yet her dedication to her art was absolute: she studied in Paris under Thomas Couture, reviewed exhibitions for the influential Saturday Review, and had her first painting exhibited at the Academy when she was only 24. She was headstrong, self-critical, opinionated and teasing - 'an artist with her pen as well as her brush'. She died tragically young. Between them, Joanna, George and Henry knew all the artistic luminaries of the day, among them Ruskin, Millais and Rossetti (with whom George shared a great deal, including mistresses). They wrote to each other all the time - not just about art, but about their friends, their families, their favourite books, their travels, their illnesses, their passions and their quarrels. They gossiped and exchanged anecdotes. They consulted mesmerists and clairvoyants. They witnessed the Great Exhibition and the funerals of Turner and the Duke of Wellington. They agitated for news of the Crimean War and the Indian Mutiny. In this book, they tell their story in their own vivid words - a story which portrays the age in which they lived and the powerful drama of their emotional and professional lives.

Recenzijas

Offers new insights on life in a close-knit Victorian family as well as into the painter's profession in mid-19th-century Britain. -- Debra Mancoff * THE ART NEWSPAPER * Sue Bradbury [ ...] has done a superb job. * CONTEMPORARY REVIEW * Ultimately, this is Joanna's story; with her passing, one obituarist wrote: 'English art has lost more than it knows.' Sue Bradbury, 152 years later, has finally remedied this oversight. * THE CHURCH TIMES * A masterful group portrait of the lives of three Pre-Raphaelite artists that serves as a slice of social history. [ This] wonderful book is compulsive reading, partly, of course, because Sue Bradbury has done full justice to some terrific and important material, but mostly because of Joanna Boyce herself. * APOLLO * A welcome feature of the book is its many illustrations of unpublished works...For the art historian, the book contains a good deal of interest. * THE BURLINGTON MAGAZINE * A richly contextualised account of one of the most intriguing artistic families in mid-Victorian Britain. [ ...] Thanks to this book [ Joanna Boyce] deserves to find a new audience as not only a painter, but also a woman of wit and determination in a world weighted against her ambitions. * COUNTRY LIFE * The light their correspondence shines on the more famous painters of the period is delightful. [ ...] Social history at its most fascinating. * THE SPECTATOR * An enjoyable study of people and their lives and gives some interesting insights on the difficulties a woman faced as a professional painter in the nineteenth century. * BIBLIOBUFFET.COM *

Dedication vi
Acknowledgements vii
List of Plates and Illustrations
viii
Black and White Illustrations xii
Introduction 1(18)
1 Artists in the Family
19(28)
2 Refuge in Work
47(27)
3 A Faltering Romance
74(27)
4 Joanna in Paris
101(30)
5 Mamma's Tyranny
131(13)
6 Leaving Home
144(16)
7 Limbo
160(27)
8 Sloping to Italy
187(29)
9 Man and Wife
216(26)
10 The Greatest Happiness on Earth
242(31)
Afterwards 273(20)
Select Bibliography 293(2)
Index 295