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  1. William Gershom Collingwood ( / ˈkɒlɪŋˌwʊd /; 6 August 1854, in Liverpool [1] – 1 October 1932) was an English author, artist, antiquary and professor of Fine Arts at University College, Reading. [2] . A long-term resident of Coniston, Cumbria, he was President of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian Society and the Lake Artists' Society. [3]

  2. by Jane Hawkes. Introduction. When considering notions of change and continuity (and by implication stasis and discontinuities or ruptures) in British art criticism at the turn of the twentieth century, the work of William Gershwin Collingwood (1854–1932) offers a particularly illuminating case study. [1]

  3. Robin George Collingwood. (Cartmell Fell, 1889 - Coniston, 1943) Filósofo, historiador, teórico y ensayista británico. Ingresó en la Universidad de Oxford en 1908, donde realizó estudios de filosofía y fue fellow del Colegio Pembroke desde 1912.

  4. Robin George Collingwood (Cartmel Fell, Lancashire, 22 de febrero de 1889 – Coniston, Cumbria, 9 de enero de 1943) fue un filósofo, historiador y arqueólogo británico. Reconocido por sus obras Los principios del arte (1938) y La idea de la historia (1946).

  5. W.G. Collingwood: Artist, Art Historian, Critic, Archaeologist, and Anglo-Saxonist. Jane Hawkes. 2015, Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide. This article examines the scholarship of the scholar and artist W. G. Collingwood, perhaps best remembered for his monograph on Anglo-Saxon sculpture (1927).

    • Jane Hawkes
  6. Browse the online catalogue. The Collingwoods were a well-connected family of artists, based in the Lake District. Their archive contains the correspondence and personal papers of four generations of the family, starting with artist and teacher William Collingwood (1819-1903).

  7. William Gershom Collingwood (1854–1932) was the son of two watercolour artists. As a boy he travelled with his father in the Alps. He also spent holidays on the shores of Lake Windermere, so hindsight would tell us that it is hardly surprising that when he went up to University College, Oxford (where he obtained a first in Greats) in 1872, he met, and had his life transformed by, John Ruskin.