The Pre-Raphaelite Sisterhood

Type :

Presentation

Pages :

11 pages

Format :

.doc

Published date :

01/13/2009

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Summary :

 
 

Table of Contents The Pre-Raphaelite Sisterhood Table of Contents

 
  1. Introduction.
  2. Sophie Anderson and Eleanor Fortescue Brickdale: Of children and virgins.
    1. Waterfalls.
    2. The composition of the painting.
    3. A painting of a miniature woman.
    4. The Wise and Foolish Virgins by Eleanor Fortescue Brickdale.
    5. Strongly reminiscent of the work of Burne Jones.
    6. the place of a woman in such a painting.
  3. Lucy Maddox brown and Annie Louise Swynnerton: the woman rebel.
    1. The apinting Margaret Roper Rescuing the Head of Her Father.
    2. The structure of the painting.
    3. The traditional image of womanhood.
    4. Joan of Arc.
    5. An image of woman that is both real and surreal.
  4. Evelyn de Morgan and Kate Elizabeth Bunce: woman as a myth.
    1. The structure of Evelyn de Morgan's Hope in the Prison of Despair.
    2. The first possibility for interpretation of the painting.
    3. Studying the aspect of the two figures.
    4. Kate Elizabeth Bunce's Melody.
  5. Bibliography.

Abstract

A considerable number of women were active in every phase of the pre-raphaelite movement. Some, as was the case for Elizabeth Siddal and Lucy Madox Brown, incorporated the ideas of their husbands and fathers into their own art. Others were deeply influenced by the freshness of the pre-raphaelite Brotherhood, by the resourceful, pious and naturalistic vision of its members and followers. At the same time, the condition of Victorian women was more than ambiguous - women had no right to vote but could open their own commerce, were published and read, and their daughters would soon know Margaret Fuller. However, what characterizes the period is a particular dichotomy of virtue and vice - that ambivalent tension residing in the conflict between the prototypes of the "perfect woman" and the "seductive siren" - and the corresponding birth of feminine self-awareness. Throughout the Victorian age and well into the first decades of the 20th century, there is this continual effort to find the nature of femininity, to reflect upon the mystery of woman and to redefine her role in the modern world. The study of the attempts of women-painters to represent themselves, or rather to depict the very concept of femininity, is therefore all the more fascinating.

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