( 1 )
↓
4102 a christmas carol annie miller arthur hughes baron von gloeden birchington charles allston collins christina georgina rossetti clark dante gabriel rossetti dudley gallery edgar allan poe edward poynter edward robert hughes eleanor fortescue-brickdale elizabeth siddal feet fetish gabriel charles dante gabriel charls dante rossetti girls goblin market heartsease pansy honesuckle john byam shaw kelmscort manor la pia de' tolomei lady lawrence alma-tadema louis de taeye maria francesca morris naked nude orient goods painting reich robert browning robert buchanan rossetti soviet study the third reich the annunciation thomas charles farrer vampyre venus verticordia vision of fiammetta water willow william holman hunt william michael women working men's college -
|
|
.
C :
1849 Free Exhibition
1849 .
1850 Free Exhibition.
1851
1851 .
1853
1857 , .
1886 .
1855 Exposition Universelle in Paris .
1880- - 1890- Les XX, - , , .
National Institution of Fine Arts.
The National Institution of Fine Arts was a short-lived Victorian-era art society founded in London to provide alternative exhibition space for artists. Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Ford Madox Brown notably exhibited there.
The organisation began as the "Institution for the Free Exhibition of Modern Art" in 1847 ("Free Exhibition" for short), and mounted shows from 1848–49 in a temporary building known as "St. George's Gallery" on Knightsbridge (road), next to Hyde Park, London. Its purpose was stated in an 1848 catalogue, "Freedom for the Artist, certainty of Exhibition for his works, and the Improvement of the Public Taste."[2] The society then changed its name to the "National Institution of Fine Arts" ("National Institution" for short) and from 1850–61 exhibited works at the old Portland Gallery at 316 Regent Street.
The National Institution aimed to provide a less-restrictive and more equitable alternative to the established exhibitions at places like the Royal Academy. The organisers allocated space by lottery, so there was no favouritism, allowed artists more control over the display of their pictures, and space was cheaper — making it more accessible to women artists who suffered discrimination by other exhibiting bodies. The exhibition was "free" in the sense that any artist was free to exhibit as long as he or she paid for the privilege!
Dante Gabriel Rossetti exhibited his first major oil painting, The Girlhood of Mary Virgin, at the Free Exhibition in March 1849, and in April 1850 Ecce Ancilla Dominiat the National Institution. Ford Madox Brown also exhibited there in 1848 with Wycliffe reading his Translation of the New Testament to John of Gaunt and in 1849 with The Young Mother and Lear and Cordelia.
1849 Free Exhibition.
:
Rossetti at the Free Exhibition at Hyde Park Corner.
Dante Gabriel Rossetti's The Girlhood of Mary Virgin at the Institution for the Free Exhibition of Modern Art's "St. George's Gallery" on Knightsbridge next to Hyde Park Corner.
1849 .
The PRB made its debut early in 1849, when Hunt and Millais put up works at the Royal Academy Exhibition
P.R.B 1849 . Rienzi Vowing to Obtain Justice for the death of his Young Brother Isabella. .
1850 Free Exhibition.
Ecce Ancilla Domini Rossetti
Twelfth Night Walter Hovell Deverell.
1850 . .
Millais's Christ in the House of his Parents.
Hunt's A Converted British Family Sheltering a Christian Missionary from the Druids.
1850 . . - , 1850 . и , , .
1851 . .
: , , .
: , .
: .
: . Convent Thoughts.
1851 , 50 . , , , 1877 .
1857 .. , , , , . Russell Place, Fitzroy Street. . , . , , . .
Rossetti showed eight works in the private Pre-Raphaelite exhibition, held at Russell Place in July 1857.
: http://www.engl.duq.edu/servus/PR_Critic/SAT4jul57.html
[Patmore, Coventry]. "A Pre-Raphaelite Exhibition." Saturday Review 4.88 (4 Jul. 1857), 11-12. Full text
In two rooms on a first-floor of a private house, No. 4, Russell-place, Fitzroy-square, there has lately been a private exhibition of au interesting collection of paintings and drawings by the pre-Raphaelites and their followers. The artists whose pictures have been exhibited are, Millais, Holman Hunt, Gabriel Rossetti, Ford Maddox [sic] Brown, Arthur Hughes, Charles Collins, Inchbold, John Brett, R. B. Martineau, J. Wolf, the late Thomas Seddon, William Davis, W. L. Windus, and a few others who have yet their names to make. There were in all seventy-two pictures and drawings, and with a very few exceptions, they were all worth looking at.
, , 1857.
Royl Exhibition of 1853.
Effie Ruskin. , , , ( ) , Anne Ryan.
http://www.victorianweb.org/painting/millais/paintings/king5.html
1857 Royal Academy.
A Dream of the Past: Sir Isumbras at the Ford.
John Everett Millais.
- The Knight, Death and the Devil, , Angel of Death.
Royl Exhibition of 1860
Millais's The Black Brunswicker.
"":
1 -
2 -
...
4 - fff
5 -
6 -
7 -
8 - MORRIS, Marshall, Falkner & Co
...
17 - King René's Honeymoon Cabinet
18 - ()
19 - , ,
: Exposition Universelle - John Everett Millais Charlotte Street |
: | [1] |