Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 4 de feb. de 2019 · I knew little about Georgiana Burne-Jones before my research, but found her intriguing. Of the many elegant, ethereal women in her husband’s paintings, how often was her appearance visible ? It ...

  2. 10 de abr. de 2023 · In Georgiana Burne-Jones’s Memorials, she writes that the artist staged his scenes in the studio ‘expressly in order to lift them out of any association with historical time’. 20 Writing in Scribner’s Magazine in 1894, Cosmo Monkhouse described Burne-Jones’s pictures as existing in a ‘land … where there is no time’, presenting the ‘stillness of a visionary world in which the ...

  3. 4 de feb. de 2019 · Burne-Jones [left] and William Morris, 1874 (Credit: Frederick Hollyer/ National Portrait Gallery, London) Burne-Jones always maintained that he preferred to make art for public buildings or churches.

  4. In Memorials of Edward Burne-Jones, Georgiana Burne-Jones writes of Elizabeth Siddal fondly. Reading contemporary accounts of Lizzie is a thrill for me and I enjoy a small glimpse into these moments. Lizzie is first mentioned, briefly, in the chapter discussing the early days of the Rossetti/Burne-Jones friendship.

  5. Georgiana Burne-Jones (also Lady Burne-Jones, née Macdonald) (known as Georgie) Painter and engraver. 21 July 1840 – 2 February 1920. Georgiana Burne-Jones, their children Margaret and Philip in the background 1883. Edward Burne-Jones, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.

  6. 18 de oct. de 2008 · Georgiana Burne-Jones, painted by her husband Sir Edward Coley Burne-Jones (their children can be seen in the background) Georgiana MacDonald Burne-Jones (1840-1920) Georgiana MacDonald came from a strict, God-fearing family. Both her father and grandfather were Methodist ministers.

  7. For Burne-Jones the purpose of portraiture was 'the expression of character and moral quality, not of anything temporary, fleeting, [or] accidental' (quoted Burne-Jones, exhibition catalogue, Hayward Gallery, London, and elsewhere, 1975-6, p. 76). Georgiana had an enormously strong character and was imbued with a moral quality that made her a ...