Neoclassicism and Romanticism

 


(Neoclassicism, Romanticism and Art Styles in 19th century - Art Map)



 


Romantic Era



 




The Pre-Raphaelite


19th - 20th Centuries


(collection)
 



John Roddam Spencer Stanhope



 

 
 

John Roddam Spencer Stanhope
 

(b Cannon Hall, Yorks, 20 Jan 1829; d Bellosguardo, nr Florence, 2 Aug 1908).

English painter. The second son of Yorkshire landed gentry, he was educated at Rugby and Christ Church, Oxford. In 1850 he studied in London with G. F. Watts, through whom he entered the artistic circle at Little Holland House, where he met D. G. Rossetti and Edward Burne-Jones. In 1857 Rossetti invited him to paint at the Oxford Union (Sir Gawaine and the Damsels at the Fountain), and in 1858 Stanhope occupied a studio next to Rossetti’s at Chatham Place, Blackfriars (London), where he painted Thoughts of the Past (London, Tate); a modern-life subject indebted to Rossetti, it shows a prostitute recalling her former life. Stanhope’s close friendship with Burne-Jones proved a more decisive influence on his work that, in the 1860s, consisted of dreamlike poetic and mythological subjects often set in quaint, enclosed spaces, as in I Have Trod the Winepress Alone (c. 1864; London, Tate).
 



 

Why seek ye the living among the dread? St Luke, Chapter XIV



 

The Temptation of Eve



 

Venus Rising From The Sea



 

The White Rabbit



 

Nymph



 

Love and the Maiden



 

The Waters of Lethe by the Plains of Elysium



 

Psyche and Charon


 

"Why seek ye the living among the dead?"



 

Thoughts of the Past  



 

The Wine Press  



 

Penelope
 

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