#pre-raphaelite art
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garlandedspirits · 4 months ago
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Various versions of Proserpine by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, created between 1874 and 1882
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the-most-sublime-fool · 2 months ago
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Elizabeth Siddal & Jane Morris
Pre-Raphaelite models as artists in their own right
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Photographs of Elizabeth Siddal (left) and Jane Morris (right)
Elizabeth Siddal and Jane Morris are mostly known as artists' models for the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, representing the ideal of feminine beauty for the movement.
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Elizabeth Siddal famously modelled for John Everett Millais's Ophelia (1852)
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Jane Morris in paintings by Dante Gabriel Rossetti: Proserpine (1874) + The Daydream (1880)
But both women were also artists themselves.
Elizabeth Siddal
In the paintings and drawings she modelled for, Siddal is never depicted as looking directly at the viewer. Instead, she is languid and lovely, gazing off dreamily into the distance or closing her eyes, like in the examples below.
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Elizabeth Siddal in paintings by Dante Gabriel Rossetti: Regina Cordium (1860) + Beata Beatrix (1870)
Her self-portrait, however, presents a fascinating contrast.
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Elizabeth Siddal's self-portrait (1854)
Her expression is stony and her gaze is direct. She knows you're looking, and she's looking right back. It reminds me of the Agnès Varda quote,
“The first feminist gesture is to say: OK, they're looking at me. But I'm looking at them.”
Here are some more of Siddal's own paintings below.
Her style is distinct and striking.
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Lady Clare (1857), The Quest of the Holy Grail (1855), Clerk Saunders (1857), Holy Family (1856)
Jane Morris
Jane Morris was not a painter herself, but an embroiderer, bookbinder, and calligrapher.
She came from a working-class background and only received an artistic education as an adult, after she married William Morris.
Unfortunately, not much of her work survives, or can be definitively attributed to her, but the two floral patterns below reveal her skill with the needle.
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floracreativa · 2 months ago
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Ophelia - John Everett Millais
1851-1852
Ophelia depicts a scene from the William Shakespeare play, Hamlet (ca 1599-1601). Painted by a founding member of the Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood in the mid 19th century, this is a painting often used as an example of Pre-Raphaelite art as it utilities it's classic traits—extreme attention to detail, vibrant colors, use of flowers for symbolism, and they often painted biblical scenes or medieval stories in a realistic manner.
Millais uses the Victorian language of flowers to fill this painting to the brim with important symbolism— among the flowers floating alongside Ophelia are red poppies, symbolizing deep slumber and loss. The purple and yellow pansies on her dress were often gifted during the Victorian era to mean 'thinking of you', used romantically and platonically. Blue forget-me-nots are along the edge of the water, meaning exactly what they are named. In the original play and in the painting, purple violets are used to symbolize new beginnings, fragility, and death happening to the youth. The weeping willow that hangs above Ophelia's floating body symbolizes childishness and ingratitude. The nettles growing in the foreground symbolize pain. The white daisies mean innocence and purity, usually used for young women.
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ai-art4 · 7 months ago
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inariedwards · 7 months ago
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"Co-curator and scholar Elizabeth Prettejohn recounts pre-Raphaelite painter Christiana Herringham’s recipe for success, in the following interview, conducted by Linda Falcone. It involves a bit of Botticelli and a fourteenth-century crafters’ handbook called Il libro dell’Arte."
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charlesreeza · 1 year ago
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Wow, these are really good! Credit to the original artists in the caption, not just the tags, would have been nice, but still, good work.
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I’ve been making gay knights (and ladies) collages on my phone at work
(Part two)
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preraphaelist · 6 months ago
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The Pre-Raphaelite Pothole, Terrace Road, St. Leonards-on-sea; part of the Great Art, Great Potholes series by SinkySnap. (x)
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antoniettabrandeisova · 4 months ago
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The Garden of Armida (detail), John Collier (British, 1850-1934)
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the-evil-clergyman · 6 months ago
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The Sorceress by John William Waterhouse (1911)
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art-for-a-reason · 11 months ago
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Loves me some Leighton
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Greek Girls Picking Up Pebbles by the Sea, Frederic Leighton, 1871
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mysticalblizzardcolor · 1 year ago
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the-most-sublime-fool · 2 months ago
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well i don't know mr dickens, this is all feeling very "old man yells at cloud"
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local man considers bending forwards to be "absurd and medieval"
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look i will admit that christ's mullet and vaguely smug aura are unfortunate, but what are you doing calling my girl mary ugly?! please.
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thelocalclown · 4 months ago
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edwardian-girl-next-door · 3 months ago
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~ Florence Harrison, "Two Red Roses Across the Moon" from Early Poems of William Morris (1914)
via internet archive
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ai-art4 · 7 months ago
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fayriequeene · 7 months ago
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Ophelia 🪷
John Everett Millais, Theodor von der Beek, Jean Baptiste Bertrand, Friedrich Wilhelm Theodor Heyser
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