Sunday, 31 December 2023

Rossetti and Leighton





One knows both how competitive the Victorian art world was, with painters keeping their new subjects secret lest another should 'steal' or forestall it, and also how sensitive Rossetti was regarding his reputation, to the extent of declining to exhibit for fear of critical reviews.

it must therefore have been distressing when in  1855 the star picture at the Royal Academy was an ambitious multi-figure piece of a procession set in late medieval Florence, centred on Cimabue and Giotto, the heroes of pre-Raphael art.    Whom the PRB had celebrated and elevated by their choice of name.

At the RA to view this marvel, Gabriel and Lizzie ran into Anna Mary Howitt.   Surely this subject belonged to the PRB.  Was this newcomer, young Frederic Leighton,   paying homage or usurping their place ?
  



Everyone praised the piece,  most especially Q Victoria, who wrote in her journal :

'There was a very big picture, by a young man, called Leighton, his 1st attempt  … It is a beautiful painting quite reminding one of a Paul Veronese, so bright & full of lights. Albert was enchanted with it - so much so that he made me buy it. The young man’s father said that his future career in life would depend on the success of this picture’.

DGR was  27 this month, increasingly anxious about his future career.  Leighton's success  at 25 must have really worried him.  Moreover, Leighton had not only taken taken 'his' subject, but  had also filled the canvas with a virtuoso series of brilliantly executed figures, each a variation on the attitudes that gave history painting its harmonious  strengths as pictorial bit-part players in a visual epic.  See, for instance, the masterly depiction of a red-clad musician tuning his violin as he walked.    DGR could never manage such a sophisticated figure.  In addition,  young Leighton had also included a couple of horses, in direct emulation of high art, where  horses' heads and rears were admired accessories. [Holman Hunt   had indeed included a phalanx of equine rumps in his latest picture of Rienzi, to show his skill.]

worst of all, perhaps, on the far right of the canvas Leighton  had placed a figure of Dante Alighieri, leaning as it were on the picture frame to watch the whole procession pass.   Was this to challenge a fellow painter calling himself Dante Rossetti?
 



It raised the question whether Leighton, who had lived  abroad until this startling debut in London, seen  his own picture - a watercolour study for a larger canvas showing Giotto painting Dante's portrait, with Cimabue looking on.  


This had been exhibited in a watercolour show in London in winter 1852.    Had Leighton seen and noted this, then taken the theme  to outdo it? 

Rossetti was in fact as impressed as anyone.  Viewing it again, he admired 'the great richness of arrangement' and agreed that Leighton was destined for greatness.  He himself was busy with other scenes related to Dante, including a sweetly conceived image of two young women by a fountain, figured as Rachel and Leah from the Purgatorio.  He was enjoying Ruskin's patronage.  But public praise was elusive.

And perhaps the episode was one that helped shape his attitude to ambition, when some while later he told poor James Smetham, who could not rouse himself to confidence, that he lacked ambition, which was not envy, but the simple feeling of rage when others did better, followed by self-analysis and renewed determination.   Rossetti had always been competitive, finding in others' achievements a spur to action.

Rossetti spent the next couple of years deep in medievalism, thanks to Ruskin's misconceived but influential notions on the merits of Gothic architecture, his own discovery of Malory's Morte D'Arthur   and enthusiastic new admirers William Morris and Burne Jones. He seized, or proposed, the opportunity to create a fresco sequence on the upper walls of the Oxford Union debating chamber and when this fizzled into failure he disappeared for nearly a year, spent with Lizzie Siddal in Derbyshire.

Where,  I  suggest, he worked principally on the translations that would appear in the volume Early Italian Poetry from Ciullo d'Alcamo to Dante Alighieri.  This was his literary claim to innovation.  Ruskin promised to subsidise what was a substantial publication.  It may have been well advanced by Rossetti's 30th birthday in May 1858.   One of his father's favourite aphorisms was 'what you don't do at thirty, you never will do'



In autumn 1858, when he returned to London with renewed ambition in visual art, he found the art world had moved on, and Leighton was once more in the vanguard,  of the latest fashion for compelling female portraits in the 'Venetian' courtesan mode.  The new star was a dark-haired Roman model named Anna Risi, or La Nanna.  This was not an entirely new pictorial feature, but it was a departure from  moralising, sentimental and high-minded subjects.

        
     Whether titled as 'A Roman Lady' (she  looked proud, but every Victorian knew this was no lady)  or 'Pavonia', la Nanna was flavour of the season, and a new challenge. 

Rossetti rose to it,  choosing now to paint in oils and aim for the broad, fluent manner the PRB had reviled.  He found Fanny Cornforth as an appropriately sensuous model, and began the sequence of 'Pre-Raphaelite beauties' that would come to define his art.   

    
 At the same time, he returned to  Giotto painting Dante, re-drafting the composition to centre on the poet and his coeval Guido Cavalcanti, whose sonnets were key elements in Rossetti's translations, together with an imagined image of Giotto, who has surely borrowed some aspects (nose and full beard) from his latest successor, the painter Frederic Leighton.

      










 

Tuesday, 21 November 2023

Ignatius Sancho



The conjectural account of Ignatius Sancho's earliest years offered by Prof Brycchan Carey in his talk for the Equiano Society  is extremely plausible and answers one puzzle, that presented by his name.  while Equiano through and after his years of enslavement acquired several names, as was common for such displaced individuals, Sancho  appears to have had only one from the age of around two years - and one that did not change when he was domiciled in Britain - where Ignatius was an unusual appellation.

Enslaved people - boys especially - were often mocked by being given classical names such as Pompey, Caesar, Hector, presumably as a kind of joke, underscoring their utterly powerless status with a heroic comparison.  Ignatius wouldn't work in quite the same way.  In Britain it was a Papist name, from Ignatius Loyola,  founder of the hated Jesuit order which in the early 18th century was still popularly believed to plot to 'return' Britain to Catholicism.  Attached to a friendless African orphan, it also would have a mocking element, which might explain why it was not changed to a more easily pronounceable name for a household servant.


In the preface to the   Letters of the Late Ignatius Sancho, an African, it is stated  that Sancho  was 'born A. D. 1729, on board a ship in the Slave-trade, a few days after it had quitted the coast of Guinea for the Spanish West-Indies, and, at Carthagena, he received from the hand of the Bishop, Baptism, and the name of Ignatius.   




Starting here, Brycchan Carey posits that the boy was in a shipment of captives  landed at the slave entrepot of Carthagena [now in Colombia]  where the Jesuit order ran the church  and organised mass  baptism for Africans, in a cathedral dedicated to Loyola.  Hence his 'Christian name'.  

Thence he was transported to Cadiz in Spain, another great trading city,  where ships of the British Navy were then able to anchor, and where he was acquired or bought by a young naval officer.  [If the dates are right, he seems a bit young - under three - for this, but maybe it was comparable to acquiring a puppy]  The midshipman was related to sisters living in Greenwich (conjecturally identified as Elizabeth, Susanna and Barbara Legge)  to whom on his return to Britain it is suggested young Ignatius was presented as a gift   According to the Letters preface, these women ' surnamed him Sancho, from a fancied resemblance to the 'Squire of Don Quixote.'    A fanciful name for a black servant who had apparently come from Spain.


Tuesday, 7 November 2023

African Hospitality ???

 


African Hospitality, a painting by George Morland from 1790, was companion piece to the artist's Execrable Human Traffic  known as the Slave Trade.    The latter (RA 1788)  shows African captives forced on onto a slaving ship.  African Hospitality depicts local people rescuing shipwrecked Europeans off the African coast, an imagined scene from an actual event.

Both works were engraved for sale within the nascent campaign to abolish the Slave Trade launched in London in 1787.   Both found their way into the collection of Alexander Dennistoun, a Glasgow merchant with family investments in north American cotton production.   African Hospitality was loaned to the 1857 Art Treasures exhibition in Manchester (#136), together with another Morland canvas listed in the Art Treasures catalogue as ‘The Englishman’s Return for African Hospitality’ (#143)

Having vainly searched for an image of 'The Englishman’s Return' I now assume it was in fact Execrable Human Traffic.  Following the death of Alexander Dennistoun’s son, both paintings were sold as 'African Hospitality' and 'Slave Trade', at Christie's, London, 9 June 1894, lot 43 (33.5 x 47 inches) and lot 44 (32 x 47 inches )  [credit to Donato Esposito - see BM database for images of both engravings]

So I am curious as to how and when the extended title was attached to Execrable Human Traffic specifically accusing the 'English'.



 


Tuesday, 10 October 2023

Henry James on Vernon Lee




 "Receive from me  a word of warning about Vernon Lee.  my reasons are several, and too complicated, some of them, to go into, but one of them is that she has lately, as I am told [in a volume of tales called Vanitas, which I haven't read] directed a sort of satire of a flagrant and markedly 'saucy' kind at me [!!] -  exactly the sort of thing she has done to others [her books - fiction - are a tissue of personalities of the hideous roman-a-clef kind] and of a particularly impudent and blackguardly sort of thing to a friend and one who has treated her with such such particular consideration as I have.

"... she is as dangerous and uncanny as she is intelligent - which is saying a great deal.  Her vigour and sweep of intellect are most rare and her talk superior altogether,  but I don't agree with you at all about her 'style', which I find insupportable, and I find also that she breaks down in her books.. There is a great second-rateness in her first-rateness.... At any rate, draw it mild with her on the question of friendship. She's a tiger-cat!"

to William James 1893

Tuesday, 3 October 2023

Henry James on Burne-Jones December 1886

" I see Burne-Jones from time to time but not as often as I should like - I am always so afraid of breaking in on his work.  Whenever he is at home he is working - and when he isn't working he's not at home.  When I do see him, it is one of the best  human pleasures that London has for me.  But I don't understand his life - that is the manner and tenor of his production - a complete studio existence - with doors and windows closed, and no search for impressions outside - no open air, no real daylight and no looking out for it.  The things he does in these conditions have exceeding beauty - but they seem to me to grow colder and colder - pictured abstractions - less and less observed.  Such as he is, however, he is certainly the most distinguished artistic  figure among Englishmen today  - the only one who has escaped vulgarization and on whom claptrap has no hold.  Moreover he is, as you know, exquisite in mind and talk - and we fraternize greatly."

to Charles Eliot Norton




Monday, 31 July 2023

P R Sisters 2

 


ANNIE MILLER  1835-1925

The daughter of a footsoldier, Miller grew up in poverty in the back streets of Chelsea, close to Holman Hunt’s studio.  Aged 18 she posed for the figure of a remorseful ‘fallen woman’ in his The Awakening Conscience.  Hunt then paid for her to be educated in literacy and ladylike manners as a suitable wife.

During Hunt’s travels in Egypt and Syria in 1854-6 she posed for John Millais, D.G.Rossetti. Arthur Hughes, Charles Collins and others. ‘She is a good girl and behaves herself very properly’, Millais reported.

In 1859, Hunt ended their engagement on the grounds of Annie’s ‘wilfulness’ and frivolity.  He offered assisted emigration, which she rejected in favour of modelling. ‘She  looks more beautiful than ever’, noted George Boyce.

When she encountered Rossetti at the International Exhibition in 1862, she was with ‘rather a swell’ and looking very handsome.  Her escort was an officer in the Volunteer reserve forces related to Lord Ranelagh named Thomas Thompson.  He and Annie married in 1863.  With a son and a daughter the couple moved to Richmond and then the south coast, where Annie died at age 90.


Sunday, 30 July 2023

PR Sisters 1

Exhibition labels are fugitive texts.  They are also compressed and strictly informative.    It's instructive to see how they read  a few, or many, years later.  There follow those from the 2019-20 NPG exhibition


 ELIZABETH SIDDAL  1829-1862##

The London-born daughter of a Sheffield cutler and shopkeeper, she entered the Pre-Raphaelite world modelling for Walter Deverell, Holman Hunt and John Millais before becoming Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s model and muse.

Tall, slim and pale, with auburn hair, she was not considered beautiful by conventional standards, but appeared so in images like Millais’ Ophelia and Rossetti’s Beatrice.

An aspiring artist, she was the sole female exhibitor in the 1857 Pre-Raphaelite show that travelled to the US.  Inspired by the poetry of Tennyson and Browning and Scottish ballads, her watercolour works were on a small scale, suitable for illustration.

After a long engagement she and Rossetti married in 1860, becoming friends with Jane and William Morris and the Burne-Joneses.  In 1861 her daughter was stillborn, causing post-natal psychosis, and subsequent death from opiate overdose.    Later, Rossetti retrieved the poems he had placed in her coffin, explaining that ‘art was the only thing for which she felt seriously [and] had it been possible, I should have found the book on my pillow the night she was buried.’ 

Friday, 7 July 2023

Bring Winifred home to Yorkshire

 

Help The De Morgan Museum bring Winifred Home. 


Support the public display of a rare portrait by Evelyn De Morgan.

 

The De Morgan Museum is launching an urgent appeal to bring home and display this captivating portrait by celebrated Victorian female artist, Evelyn De Morgan. Depicting her young cousin, Winifred Bulwer, on one of their family holidays to Cannon Hall, this is a unique example of De Morgan’s seldom-seen portraiture

image.pngChampioning a female artist

 

‘Portrait of Winifred Bulwer' (1880) is a stunning oil painting by Evelyn De Morgan (1855 - 1919), one of the most prominent female artists of the Victorian period. De Morgan rose to fame despite the challenges of social convention preventing women from becoming artists. At the beginning of her career, De Morgan made no fewer than three intimate portraits of close family members. With an arresting forward gaze and obvious ease with the artist, these intriguing artworks are unlike De Morgan’s historical and mythological subjects for which she is best known.

 

Saving local history

 

This portrait has been acquired for free public display at the De Morgan Museum at Cannon Hall, Barnsley, once a stunning 16th century mansion at which both artist and sitter spent happy summers with extended family. Displaying the painting here would at once enhance the understanding of De Morgan’s full artistic range and add an important piece of local history. The portrait will be displayed alongside scrapbooks of photographs and drawings which depict Winifred playing in the grounds of Cannon Hall, an activity still enjoyed by thousands of families today.

 

With your help, the De Morgan Museum now has the exciting opportunity to ensure this portrait will remain on public display in perpetuity from July 2023, for all to enjoy.

 

Please donate

 

This painting has been purchased with support by Art Fund and the Arts Council England/V&A Purchase Grant Fund who have recognised the importance of this painting for the De Morgan Museum at Cannon Hall, its audiences, and researchers.

 

The De Morgan Museum needs to raise £10,000 to prepare this portrait for display at its museum by Friday 21 July.

 

With just two weeks to reach our target, the De Morgan Foundation needs your help urgently. Please give as generously as you can: all donations, no matter how much, bring us one step closer to displaying this masterpiece for everyone to enjoy.

 

#BringWinifredHome

 

Associated Events

Friday 14 July, 12pm | Online Event

 

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/recently-discovered-portrait-by-evelyn-de-morgan-talk-with-jan-marsh-tickets-672888326097?aff=oddtdtcreator

 

Learn more about the history of this beautiful painting and the artist who made it with the Director of the De Morgan Museum, Sarah Hardy, in conversation with renowned art historian and Pre-Raphaelite specialist, Jan March.

 

Sarah and Jan will outline De Morgan’s artistic career with a focus on her other portraits; a rare undertaking for the artist who only painted those closest to her. Sarah will also introduce the sitter, Winifred Bulwer, who was a child when her picture was painted. Much about Winifred’s life is known through scrapbooks which document her childhood family holidays at Cannon Hall, a place of importance to artist and sitter.

 

 

Links

https://www.gofundme.com/manage/help-the-de-morgan-museum-bring-winifred-home





 

 




Thursday, 29 June 2023

Annie Miller

 a wonderful portrait drawing of Annie Miller in 1853 by Holman Hunt that's new to public gaze is being sold at Sothebys on 5 July.   the house does not allow capture  of the image, but it opens here 

 https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2023/master-works-on-paper-from-five-centuries-2/annie-miller


Monday, 19 June 2023

Art and the US Civil War

 



this week I am contributing to a zoom series on 19th century art  by discussing the Pictorial and Political resonances of Rossetti's painting The Beloved.  As you know, a favourite of mine.

the course is listed here, and the date/time/details are for 21 JUNE

https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/events/course-stories-of-art-1800-1900



Saturday, 10 June 2023

Young Teacher

 



the good news is that  Rebecca Solomon's Young Teacher, depicting two white children with their ayah or Indian nanny painted from Fanny Eaton, has finally and formally been acquired as a joint acquisition by Tate Britain and the Museum of the Home in London

Tate and Museum of the Home jointly acquire Rebecca Solomon’s A Young Teacher – Press Release | Tate

 as they say, it's a painting 'of enormous significance where the themes of race, class, faith and gender intersect', most notably in respect of the role played by women from India in sustaining the British Raj in the 19th century.

Museum of the Home and Tate jointly acquire Rebecca Solomon's A Young Teacher | Museum of the Home

It'll shortly be on view at Millbank, in re-ordered British art rooms.

Sunday, 14 May 2023

Siddal : Her Story

 

Ignore for the moment the familiar but uncorroborated tale of Walter discovering Lizzie working in a milliner’s shop.   It dates from the 1880s when all the witnesses were dead, whereas in 1857, Lizzie gave a different account to relatives in Sheffield.   

In this, she claimed to have become acquainted with the Deverell family as a dressmaker and to have shown her own drawings to Walter’s father, who was principal of the government-funded School of Design in London.  Through his encouragement, she met Walter and the young members of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, including Rossetti and Holman

This narrative is itself untrustworthy, as it proceeds to claim that Walter proposed marriage to Siddal, and that after his death Hunt introduced her to Ruskin.  

But it includes the vital detail of Lizzie’s artistic endeavours before she met the PRBs – aspirations that shaped later events.  It glides over another detail, which is her initiative in presenting her work to Mr Deverell, presumably to ask his opinion.  

One can’t immediately imagine what her ‘own designs’ depicted.   Perhaps they illustrated poetic or biblical texts, like some of her later works. Maybe they were fashion sketches like those printed in the new weekly magazines. 

One likely response would be advice to study formally, in the female classes run under the School of Design’s aegis; aimed at training artisans in draughtsmanship and basic design, these were appropriate to those working in the fashion trades, or to women seeking employment in colouring up engraved prints. 







Saturday, 22 April 2023

Marie Spartali blue plaque

 


The English Heritage plaque newly installed at the former Spartali family home on Clapham Common, aka 2 Lavender Gardens.


it was called The Shrubbery, but alas lost its extensive grounds as well as entrance drive to suburban building.   

I suspect the lost Shrubbery is depicted in Spartali's early work 

showing the lapdog that La Belle Iseult was given by Sir Tristram recognising him in the garden, according to Malory.   sorry image is dark.

It

Monday, 17 April 2023

Armida's seductive garden

 


A London blue plaque for Marie Spartali Stillman is being installed at the former Spartali home just off Clapham Common.   Now located at 2 Lavender Gardens, the Regency-era mansion to which the wealthy, exiled Greek family moved in 1864 was called The Shrubbery thanks to its extensive grounds.

The English Heritage plaque memorialises the artist whom Henry James described as a sincere, spontaneous Pre-Raphaelite in the Victorian art movement that now carries that name, and one who ‘inherited the traditions and the temper‘ of the original early Italians who inspired the PRB.

Marie studied with Ford Madox Brown, who became a lifelong friend and mentor.  She was close to Brown’s daughters Lucy and Catherine, who also became artists, and knew other members of the art world – Rossetti, Burne-Jones, Julia Cameron, William and Janey Morris.  The home circle was Greek Orthodox, including the Cassavetti, Coronio, Ralli and Ionides families.  Her first pictures were inspired by her Greek heritage featuring classical heroines Antigone and Corinna, followed by medieval figures from the British myths of King Arthur.

She also produced a range of work in other genres, notably vibrant flowerpieces and landscapes, mainly set in the Isle of Wight, where the Spartalis had a summer home, and where they were acquainted with photographer Julia Margaret Cameron, for whom Marie posed in a number of ‘subject’ pictures, as Hypatia, as the mother of the Muses and as the Spirit of the Vine. Later, in the spirit of friendship, she also sat to fellow artists Brown, Rossetti, and Burne-Jones.

Unusually for her time, her gender and her social class, Marie determined on being a professional artist, which was challenging.  When she sold her first picture, to a rich shipowner, her father urged her to make it a gift,  lest a sale suggest he could not maintain his family.  Naturally modest, she was also inhibited by the proscription on women and publicity.  As Virginia Woolf noted, ‘The chief glory of a woman is not to be talked of, said Pericles’,  yet the prime duty of an artist was to ‘make a name’.   Whereas Rossetti, for example, told each client that the current painting was his best to date, Marie tended, in the words of one friend to ‘run down her own work’.

Her own ambition was further constrained by sympathy for others.    She fell for William Stillman, an American widower with three children whose reports of Ottoman repression in Crete made him a minor hero in London, and later devoted much time to caring for her sister with mental health problems.  When she defied her parents to marry Stillman  (they suspected him of fortune-hunting) she redoubled her efforts to paint and sell,  following the current Aesthetic fashion for half-length female figures surrounded by flowers, with poetic titles.  Steadily, these developed into figural scenes from Italian authors Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio,  a trend that hallmarked mid-period Pre-Raphaelitism.

Stillman became a foreign correspondent for the Times, specialising in Balkan and Italian affairs.  The family therefore lived for some years in Florence, and then Rome, where Marie painted  during winter months, returning to Britain with pictures for the summer exhibitions.  Her output over five decades was extensive, and though the titles of many works are known from exhibition records, a substantial number have vanished from view, only now  surfacing again via auction houses.   She exhibited most regularly in London, but also occasionally in Paris, latterly in Rome, and also in the United States,  where her son Michael Stillman forged a successful architectural career.  Her daughter Effie became a sculptor and her step-daughter Lisa an artist in crayon and watercolour.

Thanks to the support shown to Marie and William by Leslie and Julia Stephen, the families became close to each after Julia Stephen’s death, when her daughter Vanessa spent time working in Lisa’s studio, watchfully observed by the young Virginia Woolf.  Something of Marie’s determined art practice seems reflected in Woolf’s insistence that the first need for an artistic woman  is a room on her own.

Marie’s late work, A rose from Armida’s Garden (1894) brings together several strands in her career.  Delicately drawn and sweetly coloured, it joins her other ‘Rossettian’ female half-lengths that were so popular with clients and now tend to define ‘PreRaphaelitism’.   The subject is the alluring figure of Amida from Gerusalemme Liberata, the fanciful Italian epic about the Crusades by Torquato Tasso, with elements taken from Ariosto.  Armida abducts the knight Rinaldo to her magical garden, where he forgets and forsakes his crusading task, until all enchantment is defeated and Jerusalem is besieged.

Spartali’s sorceress  belongs with other fin de siècle femmes fatales, who divert romantic heroes from their sterner masculine duties.  She is also a figure of the allurements of visual pleasure in art, offering escape from the realities of life, and false promises of glory.   In this guise she links back thirty years to Spartali’s Antigone, the heroine who refuses to forsake duty, a link that obliquely draws attention to the emptiness most of late-Victorian art, and does so by very beautiful means.     

 



Friday, 3 March 2023

Bid thy wife her kitchen mind

 


The long-invisible yet frequently invoked painting Women's Work: A Medley by Florence Claxton is being auctioned at Sothebys on 16 March.   It has been splendidly cleaned and now looks superb.  Here's hoping it will find a new and public home.

In it, Claxton illustrates the many obstacles faced by aspiring female professionals and the few occupations open, all centred around male gender supremacy.  

Here's the thing  [as we say now]   For decades/centuries  women's art ambitions were seriously hampered by the dominant [i.e. masculine] belief that no wife should pursue extra-domestic activities,  and no husband should permit, let alone assist a wife to do so.   In 1782 a satire demanded that Richard Cosway recall Maria to her first duty - 'shirts and shifts be making or be mending'.  'If Madam cannot make a shirt,' this continued; 'Or mend, or from it wash the dirt, Better than paint,' then  Richard's stockings would be full of holes and his manhood in shreds.  Even when fully capable of managing a household and educating children as well as making and mending, women who had grown up to regard marriage as their first aim - and had no other income - could seldom risk  exposing husbands to mockery.

When Effie Gray married Everett Millais [as she chose to call him in reaction to the name John] he delegated to her all domestic responsibilities, including his social and professional diary.  Friends and clients were told that she made all such arrangements - a duty that was probably not interrupted by the birth of eight children.

Several mid-20th century artists - a list would be useful - are on record as announcing that there could be only one professional in the house, and he must take precedence in respect of studio space, exhibitions, sales,  critical reputation and public esteem.    Wikipedia states that when John Bratby did not receive the same recognition as his wife Jean Cooke, he often painted over or slashed her canvases and restricted her painting time to three hours in the morning.   


She retaliated with a great portrait of 'the artist as sulky husband'.  and years later with a self portrait 'Not Waving but Painting'.  

 



 '   


   

Monday, 27 February 2023

Margravine Cemetery


 right here, virtually underneath the towering Charing X  Hospital in Hammersmith, the location of Fanny Eaton's grave will be permanently marked on Saturday   4 March 2023 at 12.00 noon.  

As this photo shows,  Brian and Mary Eaton identified the spot six years ago after ongoing research and following obstacles and procedures of various kinds including covid they have now succeeded in publicly memorialising Brian's great-grandmother.  All welcome to come along.

Tuesday, 31 January 2023

blue plaques

 new blue plaques in London

for CLAUDIA JONES

and 

MARIE SPARTALI STILLMAN 

and

EMILY DAVIDSON 

and 

SOPHIA DULEEP SINGH 

and 

ADA SALTER

announced by English Heritage,  in its efforts towards gender and diversity levelling 

 here is the EH press release.   Below:  The Shrubbery on Clapham Common, the Spartali family home 


In 2023 English Heritage blue plaques will be unveiled to, among others: *

Princess Sophia Duleep Singh (1915–1964): Daughter of the deposed Maharajah Duleep Singh (who already has a plaque in Holland Park) and goddaughter of Queen Victoria, Princess Sophia Duleep Singh was an active suffragette and made full use of her royal title to generate support for female enfranchisement. She was a dedicated member of the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) and the Women’s Tax Resistance League (WTRL). The plaque will mark the large house near Hampton Court Palace which was granted to Sophia and her sisters as a grace and favour apartment by Queen Victoria in 1896.

Claudia Jones (1915–1964): The plaque to journalist and anti-racism activist Claudia Jones will mark the shared dwelling in Vauxhall that was her home for nearly four years, making it her longest place of settled residence in London. It was during this time that Jones founded the West Indian Gazette and came up with the idea of bringing Caribbean carnival to London. The first carnival took place St Pancras Town Hall on 30 January 1959, and later evolved into an outdoor event, the Notting Hill Carnival.

Ada Salter (1866–1942): Ada Salter became Mayor of Bermondsey in 1922 – London’s first female mayor of a London borough and the first Labour woman to be elected as a mayor in Britain. She also served as a Bermondsey borough councillor and represented Bermondsey West on the London County Council. She had a profound and lasting impact on the hitherto deprived borough, which, by the end of the 1930s, boasted a public health service, palatial baths and wash-houses, and ambitious programmes to clear slums, build new housing and playgrounds, and plant thousands of trees. This revolution was largely due to Ada Salter, who never wavered in believing that beauty, health and welfare were inseparable. The plaque will mark the Southwark building where Ada lived in the late 1890s.

Marie Spartali Stillman (1844–1927): As a Pre-Raphaelite model, Marie Spartali Stillman featured in paintings by artists including Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Edward Burne-Jones. While she became renowned for her classic beauty, she was equally admired as painter. Trained by the Pre-Raphaelite painter, Ford Madox Brown, Spartali Stillman was one of only a small number of professional women artists of the late nineteenth century. She will be commemorated in Clapham, at the house where she first began to realise her ambition of becoming an painter.

Emily Wilding Davison (1872–1913): Emily Wilding Davison is one of the best-known suffragettes. Her tireless campaigning for women’s suffrage led to repeated arrests and imprisonment, when she would have endured numerous bouts of solitary confinement and force-feeding. Davison’s actions at the Derby on 4 June 1913 – when an act of protest led to her death – continue to resonate over a century after her death. Her plaque will mark the Kensington house where she lived as she completed her schooling at Kensington High School and embarked on her course at Royal Holloway College, only to have her plans dashed by the severe financial hardship caused by her father’s sudden death.







Wednesday, 11 January 2023

Ignatius Sancho

 



the half-length portrait of Ignatius Sancho by Thomas Gainsborough is famous, but sadly for British fans it's now far away in Canada.  In compensation, the miniature copy by an unknown artist that recently came to light is now on display at Gainsborough House in Sudbury, as  centrepiece of a room devoted to the Abolition campaign in the 18th century, to which Sancho was a prime contributor.


it's in a period frame, and in a glass case, which makes it rather hard to photograph but the tiny size and somewhat tired condition make it all the more compelling.


the miniature has been jointly acquired by Gainsborough House and the National Portrait Gallery, and will move between the two museums