Monday, 9 December 2019

Honorary Pre-Raphaelites: Florence Welch and Lily Cole





When the NPG’s Pre-Raphaelite Sisters exhibition was first projected, my aim was to include images of later models and actors whose features and presentation evoked some aspects of the original movement  - partly because many of the nineteenth  century images have a distinctly modern or contemporary look, and partly because of the loosely comparable social trajectories that begin with modelling.

In the course of creating the exhibition, this aspect was necessarily dropped; one may feel there are already too many exhibits and labels.  So I was delighted when last week, two present-day representatives of the theme took part in events associated with Pre-Raphaelite Sisters at the NPG.  Both have portraits in the Gallery collection.

Lily Cole, who has the same translucent skin and delicate features as Elizabeth Siddal, as well as Siddal’s tall and slim figure, and recently acted in that role for the BBC Radio3 programme Unearthing Elizabeth Siddal, came to film a personal introduction to the exhibition for the Art Fund.   I will post a link when it is published.


Then singer-songwriter Florence Welch took part in a conversation with photographer Tom Beard, ranging widely over their shared experiences and the visual links between the aesthetic adopted by Florence in life and art and that of the Pre-Raphaelite movement,  with some acute observations about both contemporary and historical imagery.  Plus neatly juxtaposed pictures from the exhibition and Florence’s albums. 

It was a triumphant evening, enhanced by the enthusiastic audience of Florence followers and lookalikes.   No Photography allowed  but the above picture shows their heroine with Tom Beard’s triple-mirrored photo recently acquired by the NPG.   Which chimes well with the picture of Fanny Cornforth posing against a cheval mirror in the garden of Rossetti’s home in Cheyne Walk, in 1863.


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