Pre-Raphaelite Women: Images of Femininity"...Pre-Raphaelite Women explores the lives, art and influence of the women associated with the Pre-Raphaelite circle. As models, wives, and lovers of these artists, women such as Elizabeth Siddal, Jane Morris, Fanny Cornforth, Annie Miller, and Maria Zambaco were at the very core of the movement. This unique volume juxtaposes the stories of these women with the paintings they inspired, revealing the discrepancies between the art and the Pre-Raphaelites and their reality. Art authority Jan Marsh explains in her text just how different the painters' idealized visions of these women were from their everyday lives. While portrayed as saints, angels, femme fatales, and courtly ladies, many of the Pre-Raphaelite women came from ordinary, even squalid, backgrounds."--from book jacket. |
From inside the book
43 pages matching Dante Gabriel Rossetti in this book
Page 156
Page 157
Where's the rest of this book?
Results 1-3 of 43
Common terms and phrases
allegory Annie Miller Arthur Hughes artists beauty beloved Bronkhurst Brotherhood Burne-Jones's canvas colour composition convent D. G. Rossetti Dante Gabriel Rossetti death decorative depicted Deverell dream Edward Burne-Jones Effie Elaine Elizabeth Siddal Evelyn de Morgan Fanny Cornforth female feminine figure flowers Ford Madox Brown Gallery exhibition catalogue gaze girl heroine Hughes's Hunt's idealized illustration inspired Isabella Iseult J. W. Waterhouse Jane Morris John Everett Millais John Ruskin Julia Margaret Cameron knight Lady of Shalott later lily Lizzie loose hair lovers Madeline Maria Zambaco marriage married Mary Magdalene Merlin metaphor Millais's moral motif NUBILE MAIDENS Ophelia painters pale photographer pictorial picture poem portrait posed Pre-Raphaelite art Pre-Raphaelite circle Pre-Raphaelite Women produced prostitute quoted Raphaelite religious representation romantic love Sandys's scene sexual showing sister sorceress St Agnes stunner Swinburne symbolic Tate Gallery exhibition Tennyson's theme Tristram Victorian Virgin watercolour Waterhouse wife William Holman Hunt William Morris womanhood wrote