Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. In Memorials of Edward Burne-Jones, Georgiana Burne-Jones writes of Elizabeth Siddal fondly. Reading contemporary accounts of Lizzie is a thrill for me and I enjoy a small glimpse into these moments. Lizzie is first mentioned, briefly, in the chapter discussing the early days of the Rossetti/Burne-Jones friendship.

  2. Georgiana Burne-Jones. Georgiana was the daughter of a Methodist minister and she and Edward “Ned” Burne-Jones were childhood sweethearts. She not only appears in many of his works, but her family is a veritable who’s who of Victorian culture. Read more.

  3. Georgiana (1840–1920) married the Pre-Raphaelite painter Edward Burne-Jones in 1859. Agnes married the future president of the Royal Academy Edward Poynter. Her husband later painted two of her sisters. She, Jane Morris and her sisters Louisa and Georgiana are thought to be the inspiration for figures in Burne-Jones 1864 painting Green Summer.

  4. The following 11 files are in this category, out of 11 total. Burne-Jones memorials, Rottingdean.JPG 1,649 × 1,275; 722 KB. Dante Gabriel Rossetti Drawing of Georgiana Burne-Jones.jpg 500 × 400; 215 KB. Edward Burne-Jones Green Summer (1864).jpg 450 × 263; 30 KB. Edward Burne-Jones Green Summer (1868).jpg 745 × 431; 34 KB.

  5. www.linkedin.com › pulse › georgiana-burne-jones-marina-elphickGeorgiana Burne-Jones - LinkedIn

    4. Feb. 2019 · I knew little about Georgiana Burne-Jones before my research, but found her intriguing. Of the many elegant, ethereal women in her husband’s paintings, how often was her appearance visible ? It ...

  6. Primarily known as her husband's biographer, Georgiana Burne-Jones was an artist in her own right. Taking lessons from Ford Madox Brown she painted tiles for Morris & Co. and made wood cuts, for which this highly-detailed drawing may have been intended. This work follows other contemporary illustrations of the same subject, notably George ...

  7. Georgiana Burne-Jones. Georgiana was the daughter of a Methodist minister and she and Edward “Ned” Burne-Jones were childhood sweethearts. She not only appears in many of his works, but her family is a veritable who’s who of Victorian culture. Read more.