Tuesday, 27 January 2015

Pre- Raphaelite Beauty



History

The Pre- Raphaelite Brotherhood brought notoriety to British art in the 19th century. Bursting into the spotlight in the mid century they shocked their peers with a radical art form which changed the way people perceived art and painted themselves.

To most people the thought of pre-Raphaelite makes you think of beautiful women with fair skin and long lush hair. The Brotherhoods early work was very different from these later works associated with them. Their first paintings controversially applied a bold new realism to sacred subjects and then a decade before the french impressionists, they captured subjects from urban life.

There was outrage when this art work came to light by magazines, Charles Dickens then went on to criticize Millias's painting, "Christ in the House of His Parents, that had appeared for the first time at the 1850 Royal Academy Exhibition:

"You behold the interior of a carpenter’s shop. In the foreground of that carpenter’s shop is a hideous, wry-necked, blubbering, red-headed boy, in a bed-gown, who appears to have received a poke in the hand, from the stick of another boy with whom he has been playing in an adjacent gutter, and to be holding it up for the contemplation of a kneeling woman, so horrible in her ugliness, that (supposing it were possible for any human creature to exist for a moment with that dislocated throat) she would stand out from the rest of the company as a Monster, in the vilest cabaret in France, or the lowest ginshop in England. Two almost naked carpenters, master and journeyman, worthy companions of this agreeable female, are working at their trade; a boy, with some small flavor of humanity in him, is entering with a vessel of water; and nobody is paying any attention to a snuffy old woman who seems to have mistaken that shop for the tobacconist’s next door, and to be hopelessly waiting at the counter to be served with half an ounce of her favourite mixture. Wherever it is possible to express ugliness of feature, limb, or attitude, you have it expressed. Such men as the carpenters might be undressed in any hospital where dirty drunkards, in a high state of varicose veins, are received. Their very toes have walked out of Saint Giles’s."



Links That where helpful:

http://spartacus-educational.com/ARTpreraphael.htm

http://www.tate.org.uk/learn/online-resources/glossary/p/pre-raphaelite



When looking at paintings, early photography and modern takes on Pre- Rafaelite beauty they all have the essence of longing, and sometimes pain; the way their faces are strained looking for something, but also in a in a romantic way and setting.

The reason I looked into the Pre- Rafaelites is not only due to the fact Charles Dickens thought it was ghastly, but because the romanticism built within the frame; the hair wispy and flowing free made me think of how women of the time where becoming more free in the way they wanted to be perceived themselves, changing small things like hair helped them show their personalities.

Paintings

Author: John William Waterhouse
Year of publication: 1888
Title: The Lady of Shallot
Viewed: 13th February 2015
Available from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lady_of_Shalott



Author: John William Waterhouse
Year of publication: 1908
Title: The Soul of the Rose
Viewed: 13th February 2015

Availablefrom: https://www.pinterest.com/search/pins/rs=ac&len=2&q=pre+raphaelite+beauty&term_meta%5B%5D=pre%7Cautocomplete%7C1&term_meta%5B%5D=raphaelite%7Cautocomplete%7C1&term_meta%5B%5D=beauty%7Cautocomplete%7C1



Photography


Author: John Robert Parsons
Year of publication: 1865
Title: "A Ballad of Love and Death: Pre-Raphaelite Photography in Great Britain"
Viewed: 13th February 2015

Available from: http://vintage-spirit.blogspot.co.uk/2011/04/john-robert-parsons-jane-morris-1865.html



Modern


Author: John Robert Parsons
Year of publication: 1865
Title: "A Ballad of Love and Death: Pre-Raphaelite Photography in Great Britain"
Viewed: 13th February 2015

Available from:

Coco Rocha in “Agua Caliante” for Numero by Sofia Sanchez & Mauro Mongiello


Author: John Robert Parsons
Year of publication: 1865
Title: "A Ballad of Love and Death: Pre-Raphaelite Photography in Great Britain"
Viewed: 13th February 2015

Available from: https://mippy.wordpress.com/2009/02/02/cupid-and-psyche-09/

Lily Cole in Roberto Cavalli, Spring 2005. Photographed by Miles Aldridge for Vogue Italia ('Like a Painting'), February 2005.



                                                          
Author: Unkown
Year of publication: Unkown
Title: Pre Raphaelite Lily Cole
Viewed: 13th February 2015
Available from: https://www.pinterest.com/pin/417286721694769856/






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