Art in the Modern World

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Art in the Modern World Art in the Modern World A U G U S T I N E C O L L E G E Beata Beatrix 1863 Dante Gabriel ROSSETTI The Girlhood of Mary 1849 Dante Gabriel ROSSETTI Ecce ancilla Domini 1850 Dante Gabriel ROSSETTI Our English Coasts William Holman HUNT | 1852 Our English Coasts detail 1852 William Holman HUNT The Hireling Shepherd 1851 | William Holman HUNT The Awakening Conscience 1853 William Holman HUNT The Scapegoat 1854 | William Holman HUNT The Shadow of Death 1870-73 William Holman HUNT Christ in the House of His Parents 1849 | John Everett MILLAIS Portrait of John Ruskin 1854 John Everett MILLAIS Ophelia 1852 | John Everett MILLAIS George Herbert at Bemerton 1851 | William DYCE The Man of Sorrows 1860 | William DYCE Louis XIV & Molière 1862 | Jean-Léon GÉRÔME Harvester 1875 William BOUGUEREAU Solitude 1890 Frederick Lord LEIGHTON Seaside 1878 James Jacques Joseph TISSOT The Awakening Heart 1892 William BOUGUEREAU The Beguiling of Merlin 1874 | Edward BURNE JONES Innocence 1873 William BOUGUEREAU Bacchante 1894 William BOUGUEREAU The Baleful Head 1885 Edward BURNE JONES Springtime 1873 Pierre-Auguste COT The Princesse de Broglie James Joseph Jacques TISSOT A Woman of Ambition 1883-85 James Joseph Jacques TISSOT Prayer in Cairo Jean-Léon GEROME The Boyhood of Raleigh 1870 | John Everett MILLAIS Flaming June 1895 Frederick Lord LEIGHTON Lady Lilith 1864 Dante Gabriel ROSSETTI Holyday 1876 | James Joseph Jacques TISSOT Autumn on the Thames 1871 James Joseph Jacques TISSOT A Dream of the Past: Sir Isumbras at the Ford 1857 | John Everett MILLAIS A Reading Lesson c. 1889 Léon-Jean Basile PERRAULT The Little Brother 1889 Léon-Jean Basile PERRAULT Fishing for Frogs 1882 William BOUGUEREAU Proserpine 1874 Dante Gabriel ROSSETTI A Sea Spell 1877 Dante Gabriel ROSSETTI Monna Vanna 1866 Dante Gabriel ROSSETTI Veronica Veronese 1872 Dante Gabriel ROSSETTI Light of the Harem Frederick LEIGHTON 1880 “Things have come to a pretty pass when religion is allowed to invade the sphere of private life” The Christian Martyr’s Last Prayer 1875-85 | Jean-Leon GEROME Pollice Verso 1872 | Jean-Leon GEROME Compassion 1897 William BOUGUEREAU Mary Magdalen in the Cave 1868 | Hugues MERLE Mariya Magdalen 1858-60 Anthony Frederick Augustus SANDYS St. Eulalia 1885 | J.W. WATERHOUSE St. Augustine and St. Monica 1858 | Ary SCHEFFER The Holy Women at the Tomb of Christ 1890 William BOUGUEREAU Flagellation of Our Lord Jesus Christ 1880 William BOUGUEREAU Pietà 1876 William BOUGUEREAU James Jacques Joseph TISSOT (1836-1902) Too Early 1873 | James Jacques Joseph TISSOT A Woman of Ambition 1883-85 James Jacques Joseph TISSOT Holyday 1876 | James Jacques Joseph TISSOT Charles Darwin “Men of the Day” 1871 James Jacques Joseph TISSOT Princesse de Broglie 1895 James Jacques Joseph TISSOT The Journey of the Magi New Testament series | 1894 | James Jacques Joseph TISSOT The Baptism of Yeshua New Testament series 18XX James Jacques Joseph TISSOT Jesus among the Pharisees New Testament Series | 18XX | James Jacques Joseph TISSOT The Primacy of St. Peter New Testament Series | 1886/96 | James Jacques Joseph TISSOT The Pharisee & the Publican New Testament Series | 1894 | James Jacques Joseph TISSOT The Good Samaritan New Testament Series 1886/94 James Jacques Joseph TISSOT Abraham watching God destroy Sodom (Exodus 18) James Jacques Joseph TISSOT The Flight of the Prisoners (the exile to Babylon) Old Testament series | 1896 | James Jacques Joseph TISSOT The Annunciation New Testament Series | 1894 | James Jacques Joseph TISSOT The Alabaster Box (Mt 26:6-13) New Testament Series | 1885/96 | James Jacques Joseph TISSOT The Two Men Possessed with Devils New Testament Series | 1886/94 | James Jacques Joseph TISSOT He Went Through the Villages on the Way to Jerusalem New Testament Series | 1886/94 | James Jacques Joseph TISSOT What Our Saviour Saw from the Cross New Testament series 1890 James Jacques Joseph TISSOT The Body of Jesus Carried to the Anointing Stone New Testament Series 1886/96 James Jacques Joseph TISSOT Barabbas New Testament Series 1886/94 James Jacques Joseph TISSOT Judas Hangs Himself New Testament series 1890 James Jacques Joseph TISSOT The Fall of Rome 1836 | Thomas COLE Louise Vernet, the Artist’s Wife, on Her Deathbed 1845-46 Paul DELAROCHE Salome Dancing before Herod 1870 Gustave MOREAU Apparition 1876 Gustave MOREAU Jupiter and Semele 1894 Gustave MOREAU Salome c. 1900 | Lucien LEVY-DHURMER Salome with the Head of St. John 1892 Aubrey BEARDSLEY Friedrich Nietzsche 1905 Edvard MUNCH Anxiety 1896 Edvard MUNCH Spring Evening on Karl-Johan Street 1892 | Edvard MUNCH The Shriek lithograph 1895 Edvard MUNCH The Shriek 1893 Edvard MUNCH .
Recommended publications
  • The Virgin Mary and the Feminist Voice in Dante Gabriel Rossetti's
    Małgorzata Hołdys She "felt no fear at all"? : the Virgin Mary and the Feminist Voice in Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s The Girlhood of Mary Virgin and Ecce Ancilla Domini! Acta Philologica nr 45, 36-42 2014 36 Małgorzata Hołdys Małgorzata Hołdys She “felt no fear at all”? The Virgin Mary and the Feminist Voice in Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s The Girlhood of Mary Virgin and Ecce Ancilla Domini! As it is widely known, Dante Gabriel Rossetti has never been a feminist critics’ favorite. He has been frequently criticized for indulging in a way of looking known as “the male gaze,” where the woman is depicted as a lifeless object of contemplation and a thing to be possessed rather than an individualized, thinking human being. Alternatively, his art – both poetic and pictorial – has been critiqued for stripping strong and autonomous women of their femininity.1 Finally, some of his poetic texts – the literary ballad “Eden Bower” or his sonnet “Body’s Beauty” are good examples here – are overtly misogynist in tone, as they locate the origin of the fall in female sexuality and go on to present it in monstrous, grotesque tones. However, after closer scrutiny, it seems that Rossetti does not deserve such harsh criticism. The present paper aims at partial rehabilitation of the leading member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood by showing his art as protofeminist. To do so, I intend to look closely at two famous early paintings by Rossetti, Ecce Ancilla Domini! (The Annunciation) and The Girlhood of Mary Virgin as well as at two sonnets that accompany the latter painting in order to see how the allegedly anti-feminist artist makes a claim against si- lencing, objectification, and marginalization of women.
    [Show full text]
  • Pre-Raphaelite Sisters
    Mariëlle Ekkelenkamp exhibition review of Pre-Raphaelite Sisters Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide 19, no. 1 (Spring 2020) Citation: Mariëlle Ekkelenkamp, exhibition review of “Pre-Raphaelite Sisters ,” Nineteenth- Century Art Worldwide 19, no. 1 (Spring 2020), https://doi.org/10.29411/ncaw.2020.19.1.13. Published by: Association of Historians of Nineteenth-Century Art Notes: This PDF is provided for reference purposes only and may not contain all the functionality or features of the original, online publication. License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License Creative Commons License. Ekkelenkamp: Pre-Raphaelite Sisters Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide 19, no. 1 (Spring 2020) Pre-Raphaelite Sisters National Portrait Gallery, London October 17, 2019–January 26, 2020 Catalogue: Jan Marsh and Peter Funnell, Pre-Raphaelite Sisters. London: National Portrait Gallery Publications, 2019. 207 pp.; 143 color illus.; bibliography; index. $45.58 (hardcover); $32.49 (paperback) ISBN: 9781855147270 ISBN: 1855147279 The first exhibition devoted exclusively to the contribution of women to the Pre-Raphaelite movement opened in the National Portrait Gallery in London in October. It sheds light on the role of twelve female models, muses, wives, poets, and artists active within the Pre- Raphaelite circle, which is revealed as much less of an exclusive “boys’ club.” The aim of the exhibition was to “redress the balance in showing just how engaged and central women were to the endeavor, as the subjects of the images themselves, but also in their production,” as stated on the back cover of the catalogue accompanying the exhibition. Although there have been previous exhibitions on the female artists associated with the movement, such as in Pre-Raphaelite Women Artists (Manchester City Art Galleries, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, Southampton City Art Gallery, 1997–98), the broader scope of this exhibition counts models and relatives among the significant players within art production and distribution.
    [Show full text]
  • Dante Gabriel Rossetti - Poems
    Classic Poetry Series Dante Gabriel Rossetti - poems - Publication Date: 2012 Publisher: Poemhunter.com - The World's Poetry Archive Dante Gabriel Rossetti(12 May 1828 – 9 April 1882) Rossetti was born, the son of an Italian patriot and political refugee and an English mother, in England. He was raised in an environment of cultural and political activity that, it has been suggested, was of more import to his learning than his formal education. This latter was constituted by a general education at King's College from 1836 to 1841 and, following drawing lessons at a school in central London at the age of fourteen, some time as a student at the Royal Academy from 1845 onwards. Here he studied painting with William Hollman Hunt and John Everett Millais who, in 1848, would set up the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood with Rossetti, Rossetti's younger brother and three other students. The school's aspirations, in this its first incarnation, was to paint true to nature: a task pursued by way of minute attention to detail and the practice of painting out of doors. Rossetti's principal contribution to the Brotherhood was his insistence on linking poetry and painting, no doubt inspired in part by his earlier and avaricious readings of Keats, Shakespeare, Goethe, Sir Walter Scott, Byron, Edgar Allan Poe and, from 1847 onwards, the works of William Blake. 'The Germ' lasted however for only four issues, all published in 1850. In 1854 Rossetti met and gained an ally in the art critic John Ruskin and, two years later, meetings with Edward Burne-Jones and William Morris set a second phase of the Brotherhood into movement.
    [Show full text]
  • Dante Gabriel Rossetti and the Italian Renaissance: Envisioning Aesthetic Beauty and the Past Through Images of Women
    Virginia Commonwealth University VCU Scholars Compass Theses and Dissertations Graduate School 2010 DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI AND THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCE: ENVISIONING AESTHETIC BEAUTY AND THE PAST THROUGH IMAGES OF WOMEN Carolyn Porter Virginia Commonwealth University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd Part of the Arts and Humanities Commons © The Author Downloaded from https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/113 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at VCU Scholars Compass. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of VCU Scholars Compass. For more information, please contact [email protected]. © Carolyn Elizabeth Porter 2010 All Rights Reserved “DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI AND THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCE: ENVISIONING AESTHETIC BEAUTY AND THE PAST THROUGH IMAGES OF WOMEN” A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at Virginia Commonwealth University. by CAROLYN ELIZABETH PORTER Master of Arts, Virginia Commonwealth University, 2007 Bachelor of Arts, Furman University, 2004 Director: ERIC GARBERSON ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR, DEPARTMENT OF ART HISTORY Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond, Virginia August 2010 Acknowledgements I owe a huge debt of gratitude to many individuals and institutions that have helped this project along for many years. Without their generous support in the form of financial assistance, sound professional advice, and unyielding personal encouragement, completing my research would not have been possible. I have been fortunate to receive funding to undertake the years of work necessary for this project. Much of my assistance has come from Virginia Commonwealth University. I am thankful for several assistantships and travel funding from the Department of Art History, a travel grant from the School of the Arts, a Doctoral Assistantship from the School of Graduate Studies, and a Dissertation Writing Assistantship from the university.
    [Show full text]
  • Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (PRB) Had Only Seven Members but Influenced Many Other Artists
    1 • Of course, their patrons, largely the middle-class themselves form different groups and each member of the PRB appealed to different types of buyers but together they created a stronger brand. In fact, they differed from a boy band as they created works that were bought independently. As well as their overall PRB brand each created an individual brand (sub-cognitive branding) that convinced the buyer they were making a wise investment. • Millais could be trusted as he was a born artist, an honest Englishman and made an ARA in 1853 and later RA (and President just before he died). • Hunt could be trusted as an investment as he was serious, had religious convictions and worked hard at everything he did. • Rossetti was a typical unreliable Romantic image of the artist so buying one of his paintings was a wise investment as you were buying the work of a ‘real artist’. 2 • The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (PRB) had only seven members but influenced many other artists. • Those most closely associated with the PRB were Ford Madox Brown (who was seven years older), Elizabeth Siddal (who died in 1862) and Walter Deverell (who died in 1854). • Edward Burne-Jones and William Morris were about five years younger. They met at Oxford and were influenced by Rossetti. I will discuss them more fully when I cover the Arts & Crafts Movement. • There were many other artists influenced by the PRB including, • John Brett, who was influenced by John Ruskin, • Arthur Hughes, a successful artist best known for April Love, • Henry Wallis, an artist who is best known for The Death of Chatterton (1856) and The Stonebreaker (1858), • William Dyce, who influenced the Pre-Raphaelites and whose Pegwell Bay is untypical but the most Pre-Raphaelite in style of his works.
    [Show full text]
  • Pre-Raphaelites: Victorian Art and Design, 1848-1900 February 17, 2013 - May 19, 2013
    Updated Wednesday, February 13, 2013 | 2:36:43 PM Last updated Wednesday, February 13, 2013 Updated Wednesday, February 13, 2013 | 2:36:43 PM National Gallery of Art, Press Office 202.842.6353 fax: 202.789.3044 National Gallery of Art, Press Office 202.842.6353 fax: 202.789.3044 Pre-Raphaelites: Victorian Art and Design, 1848-1900 February 17, 2013 - May 19, 2013 Important: The images displayed on this page are for reference only and are not to be reproduced in any media. To obtain images and permissions for print or digital reproduction please provide your name, press affiliation and all other information as required (*) utilizing the order form at the end of this page. Digital images will be sent via e-mail. Please include a brief description of the kind of press coverage planned and your phone number so that we may contact you. Usage: Images are provided exclusively to the press, and only for purposes of publicity for the duration of the exhibition at the National Gallery of Art. All published images must be accompanied by the credit line provided and with copyright information, as noted. Ford Madox Brown The Seeds and Fruits of English Poetry, 1845-1853 oil on canvas 36 x 46 cm (14 3/16 x 18 1/8 in.) framed: 50 x 62.5 x 6.5 cm (19 11/16 x 24 5/8 x 2 9/16 in.) The Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, Presented by Mrs. W.F.R. Weldon, 1920 William Holman Hunt The Finding of the Saviour in the Temple, 1854-1860 oil on canvas 85.7 x 141 cm (33 3/4 x 55 1/2 in.) framed: 148 x 208 x 12 cm (58 1/4 x 81 7/8 x 4 3/4 in.) Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery, Presented by Sir John T.
    [Show full text]
  • Historical Painting Techniques, Materials, and Studio Practice
    Historical Painting Techniques, Materials, and Studio Practice PUBLICATIONS COORDINATION: Dinah Berland EDITING & PRODUCTION COORDINATION: Corinne Lightweaver EDITORIAL CONSULTATION: Jo Hill COVER DESIGN: Jackie Gallagher-Lange PRODUCTION & PRINTING: Allen Press, Inc., Lawrence, Kansas SYMPOSIUM ORGANIZERS: Erma Hermens, Art History Institute of the University of Leiden Marja Peek, Central Research Laboratory for Objects of Art and Science, Amsterdam © 1995 by The J. Paul Getty Trust All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America ISBN 0-89236-322-3 The Getty Conservation Institute is committed to the preservation of cultural heritage worldwide. The Institute seeks to advance scientiRc knowledge and professional practice and to raise public awareness of conservation. Through research, training, documentation, exchange of information, and ReId projects, the Institute addresses issues related to the conservation of museum objects and archival collections, archaeological monuments and sites, and historic bUildings and cities. The Institute is an operating program of the J. Paul Getty Trust. COVER ILLUSTRATION Gherardo Cibo, "Colchico," folio 17r of Herbarium, ca. 1570. Courtesy of the British Library. FRONTISPIECE Detail from Jan Baptiste Collaert, Color Olivi, 1566-1628. After Johannes Stradanus. Courtesy of the Rijksmuseum-Stichting, Amsterdam. Library of Congress Cataloguing-in-Publication Data Historical painting techniques, materials, and studio practice : preprints of a symposium [held at] University of Leiden, the Netherlands, 26-29 June 1995/ edited by Arie Wallert, Erma Hermens, and Marja Peek. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0-89236-322-3 (pbk.) 1. Painting-Techniques-Congresses. 2. Artists' materials- -Congresses. 3. Polychromy-Congresses. I. Wallert, Arie, 1950- II. Hermens, Erma, 1958- . III. Peek, Marja, 1961- ND1500.H57 1995 751' .09-dc20 95-9805 CIP Second printing 1996 iv Contents vii Foreword viii Preface 1 Leslie A.
    [Show full text]
  • This Book Reconsiders and Revises Our Understanding of Pre-Raphaelite
    Cambridge University Press 0521824680 - Pre-Raphaelite Painting and Nineteenth-Century Realism Marcia Werner Frontmatter More information PRE-RAPHAELITE PAINTING AND NINETEENTH-CENTURY REALISM This book reconsiders and revises our understanding of Pre-Raphaelite painting: its philosophy of art, its sources, its cohesiveness, and its relationship to the broader context of contemporary European Realism. Challenging several long-standing be- liefs about the PRB, which is often characterized as a disparate group who pursued divergent, even antithetical, goals, Marcia Werner proposes that the Pre-Raphaelites developed and shared an artistic philosophy comprehensive enough to embrace all of their differences. Werner reconstructs this credo through careful study of writings by Pre-Raphaelite artists and their associates. She also examines unexplored and neglected contemporary intellectual and philosophical sources, particularly those of John Stuart Mill and Thomas Carlyle, whose works are shown to be critical to an understanding of Pre-Raphaelite painting. Supporting her ideas through sustained analyses of key works, the author also argues that John Ruskin’s importance to the Pre-Raphaelites has been misunderstood and overstated. Marcia Werner is Adjunct Associate Professor of Art History at Temple University in Philadelphia. © Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 0521824680 - Pre-Raphaelite Painting and Nineteenth-Century Realism Marcia Werner Frontmatter More information Pre-Raphaelite Painting and Nineteenth-Century
    [Show full text]
  • Art As Communication: Y the Impact of Art As a Catalyst for Social Change Cm
    capa e contra capa.pdf 1 03/06/2019 10:57:34 POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE OF LISBON . PORTUGAL C M ART AS COMMUNICATION: Y THE IMPACT OF ART AS A CATALYST FOR SOCIAL CHANGE CM MY CY CMY K Fifteenth International Conference on The Arts in Society Against the Grain: Arts and the Crisis of Democracy NUI Galway Galway, Ireland 24–26 June 2020 Call for Papers We invite proposals for paper presentations, workshops/interactive sessions, posters/exhibits, colloquia, creative practice showcases, virtual posters, or virtual lightning talks. Returning Member Registration We are pleased to oer a Returning Member Registration Discount to delegates who have attended The Arts in Society Conference in the past. Returning research network members receive a discount o the full conference registration rate. ArtsInSociety.com/2020-Conference Conference Partner Fourteenth International Conference on The Arts in Society “Art as Communication: The Impact of Art as a Catalyst for Social Change” 19–21 June 2019 | Polytechnic Institute of Lisbon | Lisbon, Portugal www.artsinsociety.com www.facebook.com/ArtsInSociety @artsinsociety | #ICAIS19 Fourteenth International Conference on the Arts in Society www.artsinsociety.com First published in 2019 in Champaign, Illinois, USA by Common Ground Research Networks, NFP www.cgnetworks.org © 2019 Common Ground Research Networks All rights reserved. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the applicable copyright legislation, no part of this work may be reproduced by any process without written permission from the publisher. For permissions and other inquiries, please visit the CGScholar Knowledge Base (https://cgscholar.com/cg_support/en).
    [Show full text]
  • Literary Influences in the Art of Dante Gabriel Rossetti
    Literary influences in the art of Dante Gabriel Rossetti Item Type text; Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) Authors Oswald, Artell Pikka, 1945- Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 28/09/2021 18:19:44 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/347796 LITERARY INFLUENCES IN THE ART OF DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI by Artell Pikka Oswald A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the DEPARTMENT OF ART In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS In the Graduate College THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA 19 7 2 STATEMENT BY AUTHOR This thesis has been submitted in partial ful­ fillment of requirements for an advanced degree at The University of Arizona and is deposited in the University Library to be made available to borrowers under rules of the Library. Brief quotations from this thesis are allowable without special permission, provided that accurate acknowledgment of source is made. Requests for permis­ sion for extended quotation from or reproduction of this manuscript in whole or in part may be granted by the head of the major department or the Dean of the Graduate College when in his judgment the proposed use of the material is in the interests of scholarship. In all other instances, however, permission must be obtained from the author. SIGNED APPROVAL BY THESIS CO-DIRECTORS This thesis has been approved on the date shown below; <r - 3 ~ 7 ROBERT W.
    [Show full text]
  • Dante Gabriel Rossetti •William Holman Hunt •John Everett Millais
    ArtH 2257 19th Century Art Realism vs. Symbolism Robert Campin: The Merode Altarpiece, 1425-28 Robert Campin: The Merode Altarpiece, 1425-28 Jan van Eyck: Arnolfini Wedding. 1434 Jan van Eyck, Arnolfini Wedding, 1434 Augustus Egg: Past and Present, 1858 Augustus Egg: Past and Present, 1858 Augustus Egg: Past and Present, 1858 Augustus Egg: Past and Present, 1858 Augustus Egg: Past and Present, 1858 Augustus Egg: Past and Present, 1858 Augustus Egg: Past and Present, 1858 G.F. Watts: Found Drowned, 1849-50 Richard Redgrave: The Poor Teacher, 1845 Gustave Dore: Orange Court, Drury Lane, illustration in in B. Jerrold, London, a Pilgrimage,1872 The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood Founded 1848 by: •Dante Gabriel Rossetti •William Holman Hunt •John Everett Millais Rossetti Millais Hunt Julia Margaret Cameron: William Holman Hunt, 1850 WH Hunt: Early Britons Sheltering Christian Missionary from Druids, 1850 William Holman Hunt, The Hireling Shepherd, 1851 William Holman Hunt, The Hireling Shepherd, 1851 William Holman Hunt, The Hireling Shepherd, 1851 WH Hunt: The Awakening Conscience, 1852 WH Hunt: The Awakening Conscience, 1852 WH Hunt: The Awakening Conscience, 1852 WH Hunt: The Awakening Conscience, 1852 WH Hunt: The Awakening Conscience, 1852 Jan van Eyck: Arnolfini Wedding. 1434 Ford Maddox Brown, Take Your Son, Sir!, 1852-59; 1892 (unfinished) Ford Maddox Brown, Take Your Son, Sir!, 1852-59; 1892 (unfinished) John E. Millais: Lorenzo and Isabella, 1849 John E. Millais: Ophelia, 1851-2 John E. Millais: Ophelia, 1851-2 John E. Millais: Mariana, 1851 John E. Millais: Mariana, 1851 John E. Millais: Mariana, 1851 John E. Millais: Mariana, 1851 John E.
    [Show full text]
  • William Holman Hunt's Portrait of Henry Wentworth Monk
    Virginia Commonwealth University VCU Scholars Compass Theses and Dissertations Graduate School 2017 William Holman Hunt’s Portrait of Henry Wentworth Monk Jennie Mae Runnels Virginia Commonwealth University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd © The Author Downloaded from https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/4920 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at VCU Scholars Compass. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of VCU Scholars Compass. For more information, please contact [email protected]. William Holman Hunt’s Portrait of Henry Wentworth Monk A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Art History at Virginia Commonwealth University. Jennie Runnels Virginia Commonwealth University Department of Art History MA Thesis Spring 2017 Director: Catherine Roach Assistant Professor Department of Art History Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond, Virginia April 2017 Contents Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1 Holman Hunt and Henry Monk: A Chance Meeting Chapter 2 Jan van Eyck: Rediscovery and Celebrity Chapter 3 Signs, Symbols and Text Conclusion List of Images Selected Bibliography Acknowledgements In writing this thesis I have benefitted from numerous individuals who have been generous with their time and encouragement. I owe a particular debt to Dr. Catherine Roach who was the thesis director for this project and truly a guiding force. In addition, I am grateful to Dr. Eric Garberson and Dr. Kathleen Chapman who served on the panel as readers and provided valuable criticism, and Dr. Carolyn Phinizy for her insight and patience.
    [Show full text]