Though always controversial in art circles, the Pre-Raphaelites have also always been extremely popular with museum goers. This study provides a comprehensive view of the movement up to the year 2000. It shows us why, a century and a half later, Pre-Raphaelite art retains its power to fascinate, haunt, and often shock its viewers. Calling themselves the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, John Everett Millais, and William Holman Hunt produced a statement of ideas that revelutionized art practice in Victorian England. Critical of the Royal Academy's formulaic works, these painters believed that painting had been misdirected since Raphael. They and the artists who joined with them, including William Michael Rossetti, James Conlinson, and Frederick George Stephens, created bright works representing nature and literary themes in fresh detail and colour. Considered heretical by many - and frequently admonished for a lack of grace in composition - the group disbanded after only a few years. Yet its artists and ideals remained influential; its works, greatly admired. This book raises questions about the group's social and artistic identity. Was it the first avant-garde movement in modern art? What role did women play in the Pre-Raphaelite fraternity? How did relationships between the artists and models affect the paintings? The author also analyzes technique, pinning down the distinctive characteristics of these painters and evaluating the degree to which a group style existed. And she considers how Pre-Raphaelite art responded to and commented on its time and place - a world characterized by religious and political controversy, new scientific concern for precise observation, the emergence of psychology, and changing attitudes toward sexuality and women.
Buy The Art of the Pre-Raphaelites by Elizabeth Prettejohn from Australia's Online Independent Bookstore, BooksDirect.