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Familiar within the circles of the Pre-Raphaelites for her dark red hair and pale skin, she did her most notable modelling for artist Edward Burne-Jones. She also sat as a model for James McNeill Whistler and Dante Gabriel Rossetti .
- Marie Terpsithea Cassavetti, 29 April 1843, London, England
- Slade School
- 14 July 1914 (aged 71), Paris, France
- British and Greek
Familiar dentro de los círculos prerrafaelitas por su cabello rojo oscuro y piel pálida, fue la principal modelo para el artista Edward Burne-Jones. También se sentó como modelo para James McNeill Whistler y Dante Gabriel Rossetti .
- Μαρία Τερψιθέα Κασσαβέτη
- Cementerio de West Norwood
26 de nov. de 2021 · Burne-Jones’ wedding gift clearly reflects his feelings for Maria and her rejection of her husband Dr Demetrius Zambaco. Venus Epithalamia was designed to celebrate the marriage of Marie, the daughter of the wealthy Greek Consul-General Michael Spartali, cousin of Euphrosyne.
- Simon Toll
Maria Zambaco in Cupid and Psyche by Sir Edward Burne-Jones. Born into a wealthy Anglo-Greek family, Maria was an accomplished artist who studied under sculptor Auguste Rodin. She also appears in works by several Pre-Raphaelite artists, including Sir Edward Burne-Jones, who became her lover.
Edward Burne-Jones y Maria Zambaco tuvieron una relación apasionada y turbulenta en la década de 1860. Burne-Jones era un artista inglés en ascenso, mientras que Zambaco era una joven griega-inglesa y modelo que ya había llamado la atención del poeta y crítico de arte Dante Gabriel Rossetti.
This is an 1870 Portrait of Pre-Rathaelite model Maria Zambacoby painted by British artist Edward Burne-Jones. Edward Burne-Jones was associated with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood of painters in the 19th century, a movement that promoted a Medieval style of art as an alternative to the influence of the Renaissance.
His cousin Mary Zambaco, who posed for the woman on the far left, was for a time Burne-Jones's lover. Delve deeper. Discover more about this object. read Perugino, and his rediscovery by the Pre-Raphaelites Pietro Vannucci (about 1450 – 1523), known as Perugino, was one of the most successful and influential artists of the Italian Renaissance.