This is more of a visual post today, as I'm going to show you more of the work in progress I'm doing and some pictures that I've created while playing with the Pre~Raphaelite's art works.
This is the Leaves/Nature project I'm sewing. I've added hand embroidery, which needs to be finished, in more natural, curving swirls, contrasting with the straight lines underneath.
Here are some pictures I've created using some of the Pre~Raphaelite art works I wrote about in my last post. I've altered them using digital tools and just had some fun with them really. :o)
Night by Edward Robert Hughes with added diamonds by me, echoing the stars in her hair.
Ophelia by John Everett Millais with a more sketch-like appearance and splashes of colour by me.
The Lady of Challot by John William Waterhouse, cropped and with a splash of water by me.
Mariana by John Everett Millais with added raindrops by me, as if looking through a rain splattered window maybe?
:o)
Friday, 24 June 2016
Friday, 17 June 2016
Influences no. 3 ~ the Pre~Raphaelites
The themes they used included medieval culture, Arthurian legend and the works of poets such as Keats, Shelley, Dante and Thackery and the plays of Shakespeare, as in the painting below, Ferdinand Lured by Ariel, 1849, John Everett Millais. I also have an interest in medieval things, Arthurian legend and anything mythical, so their work is perfect for me.
Ferdinand Lured by Ariel, 1849, John Everett Millais |
The Pre~Raphaelite Brotherhood (PRB) was founded in 1848. Its three original members were Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William Holman Hunt and John Everett Millais. They had an intense dislike of the art that was fashionable at the time, the way it was taught at the Royal Academy. It had to be dark in tone and portray an image of the ideal and the PRB thought the subject matter was too grand and trivial. They wanted to revolt against that and go back to the kind of art that was done before the Renaissance, bringing in brighter colours, painting what was in front of them rather than an imagined ideal image, observing nature, painting it accurately and portraying simple subjects with seriousness and sincerity.
Autumn Leaves, 1856, John Everett Millais |
This was their philosophy, as recorded by William Michael Rossetti:
1. To have genuine ideas to express;
2. To study nature attentively, so as to know how to express them;
3. To sympathise with what is direct and serious and heartfelt in previous art, to the exclusion of what is conventional and self-parading and learned by rote;
4. And most indispensable of all, to produce thoroughly good pictures and statues.
The PRB was a secret society to begin with, wanting to create works of art which could change minds and inspire people. Their art was all about a truthfulness to nature; they painted outside to accurately reflect the trees, flowers and landscape as they were and tackled the social problems of the time, something other artists were ignoring.
Attention to detail was an important thing for them, as John Ruskin wrote:
"go to nature in all singleness of heart, rejecting nothing, selecting nothing and scorning nothing."
Ophelia, 1851-52, John Everett Millais |
One of the most popular Pre~Raphaelite works is Ophelia by John Everett Millais (above) although other versions of Ophelia have been painted by Arthur Hughes in 1852 and John William Waterhouse in 1894. This of course, is from Hamlet by Shakespeare, portraying Ophelia drowning after Hamlet has killed her father. Again, everything in the painting is symbolic; the flowers all either mentioned in the play or chosen for their meaning, for example, the weeping willow = forsaken love; the nettles = pain; the daisies = innocence; the roses = youth, love and beauty; the poppy = sleep, death, remembrance and the forgetmenots are obvious.
The bank and flowers around it were painted by a river in Ewell. Ophelia was painted from a model, Lizzie Siddal, in a bath. From what I remember when I was studying art in collage, the water in the bath was warm to begin with, but chilled after a while, so Lizzie Siddal was laying there freezing and caught a cold. She married Dante Gabriel Rossetti in 1860 but unfortunately died in 1862 due to an overdose of laudanum.
Midsummer Eve, c.1908, Edward Robert Hughes |
The art of the PRB was not an immediate success. It went against everything the Royal Academy taught and people hated it. However, the leading art critic John Ruskin was persuaded to intervene and wrote two letters to The Times giving his support to the Pre~Raphaelites. After that (surprise, surprise) the art world and the public accepted the Pre~Raphaelite art and it went from strength to strength, becoming a huge part of Victorian culture (which just shows that those in 'authority' aren't always right, if someone doesn't like your art, someone else will and sometimes what's 'fashionable' can hinge on the opinion of just one person).
The Knight of the Sun, 1860, Arthur Hughes |
The PRB gained a huge following with many artists taking on their ideas and ethics and they changed art forever, but due to the members beginning to go in different directions, the Brotherhood broke up. There was a second phase of Pre~Raphaelitism with their followers though, the original members meeting new artists and influencing them, joining with them to go down a new route using similar principles.
Flaming June, c.1895, Frederic, Lord Leighton |
The Pre~Raphaelites influenced much of the art that came after them and although their work went out of fashion after the First World War due to the beautiful images being so opposite to the realities of war and the hardships people faced at that time, it had a revival in the 1960s. I'm so glad it did.
The Lady of Chalot, 1888, John William Waterhouse |
Night, c.1880-85, Edward Robert Hughes |
One of my absolute favourite paintings is Mariana, painted by John Everett Millais in 1851 (below). I love the deep colours, the red of her stool and in the window, the deep midnight blue of her dress, then the candle hanging up on the right, a point of light surrounded by shadow, the browning leaves scattered around.
Mariana, 1851, John Everett Millais |
It was inspired by the poem Mariana by Tennyson, which in turn was inspired by the character Mariana in Shakespeare's Measure for Measure. Her dowry was lost in a shipwreck and she was rejected by her fiance Angelo. She still loves him and longs to be with him but the withered leaves suggest time is moving on and she is getting older. She is separated from the world outside and alone in her house. It is beautiful in its sense of melancholy and wistfulness.
When I discovered the Pre~Raphaelites, the colour, imagery and subjects were like a revelation, as all I'd seen before were the Renaissance type art works and, to be honest, they seemed a little dull and high-brow at the time. The Pre~Raphaelites depicted things I had an interest in and created works that I could look at for ages. I like their rebellious nature ~ making the art they wanted to create, not what those in 'authority' said they should be doing. They created their own path and that, for me, is a hugely inspiring thing.
You can see more about the Pre~Raphaelites at: The Tate , victorianweb.org , preraphaelitesisterhood.com
Tuesday, 7 June 2016
Work in Progress.
Hello. Did you miss me? :0) I haven't posted anything for a couple of weeks because I've had back pain, which means I've had to do exercises and I've taken up yoga, yet another thing to add to my "to do" list. It was such a lovely day yesterday I decided to try doing yoga in the garden in the fresh air. It was a new experience and quite nice to do it while listening to the birds tweeting around me. I didn't know birds could join twitter though. :D
As I haven't been able to do much work, I haven't completed a piece or a painting yet, but I have got a work in progress at the moment, so here it is, my "Leaves" project. I've made it so far with strips of green fabric in two different shades.
I've stitched them together with decorative stitching.
I've printed a leaf pattern on to organza and I'm going to stitch that on top with hand embroidery.
I think I've been inspired to work on this project because all the plants are in bloom and the weather has been so fine. It's the kind of thing that makes you want to create art about nature, but then there's plenty of inspiration to be found at any time of year: the rich colour of autumn leaves, the patterns of bare twigs and frost in winter.......
The birds who visit my garden seem to be doing well. The magpies have had three chicks which have all fledged and yesterday I saw a mother sparrow feeding her newly fledged chick. The young one was fluttering his wings and chirping as she turned to him with the food. I think there were more chicks hiding in the tree. It was a wonderful thing to see, I've never seen that before, only on TV programmes. It's amazing what you can find in your own garden.
As I haven't been able to do much work, I haven't completed a piece or a painting yet, but I have got a work in progress at the moment, so here it is, my "Leaves" project. I've made it so far with strips of green fabric in two different shades.
I've stitched them together with decorative stitching.
I've printed a leaf pattern on to organza and I'm going to stitch that on top with hand embroidery.
I think I've been inspired to work on this project because all the plants are in bloom and the weather has been so fine. It's the kind of thing that makes you want to create art about nature, but then there's plenty of inspiration to be found at any time of year: the rich colour of autumn leaves, the patterns of bare twigs and frost in winter.......
The birds who visit my garden seem to be doing well. The magpies have had three chicks which have all fledged and yesterday I saw a mother sparrow feeding her newly fledged chick. The young one was fluttering his wings and chirping as she turned to him with the food. I think there were more chicks hiding in the tree. It was a wonderful thing to see, I've never seen that before, only on TV programmes. It's amazing what you can find in your own garden.
Labels:
birds,
embroidery,
nature,
sewing,
textile art,
textiles,
wip
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