/https://public-media.si-cdn.com/filer/6f/d9/6fd9a878-1e3a-4145-b706-0348d21f540e/003_sophie_gray_by_john_everett_millais.jpg) |
| John Everett Millais, Sophy Gray, 1856
|
The exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery in London ends today. From
Smithsonian:
Per Encyclopedia Britannica, the Brotherhood’s work focused on religious and medieval themes.
Painted with maximum realism inspired by 15th-century Florentine and
Sienese paintings, the young artists’ naturalistic creations were
populated by beautiful women. The cryptic initials “PRB” appeared in the bottom corner of early Pre-Raphaelite works. Simply put, the Brotherhood was a boys’ club that intentionally excluded women.
“Though its goals were ‘serious and heartfelt,’” explains Dinah Roe, a senior lecturer at Oxford Brookes University, for the British Library,
“the PRB was founded in a spirit of waggish male camaraderie which
expressed itself in pranks, late-night smoking sessions and midnight
jaunts around London’s streets and pleasure gardens.”
The Brotherhood’s models, who often doubled as the artists’ lovers,
were usually at the center of their creations. But some, like Siddal, used their seemingly passive roles as models to fund their own artistic careers alongside their elite husbands. Siddal is among the Pre-Raphaelite women painted over by history. She
started modeling not to gain the attention of men, but to fund her own
artistic practice. Initially working part time at her parents’ hat shop
while modeling on the side, Siddal gained an unprecedented amount of
popularity in the Pre-Raphaelite circle, with her likeness becoming a
symbol of feminine beauty. (Read more.)
More
HERE.
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