The Back Room
The Pre-Raphaelite Mystique
(copyright Shawn Christopher Shea, 1999)
The Pre-Raphaelite Mystique
(copyright Shawn Christopher Shea, 1999)
Deeply tucked away in the elusive corset of the Victorian social fabric, the art of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood lay hidden and alluring. This “brotherhood” was a collection of seven artists, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, John Everett Millais, William Holman Hunt, James Collinson, F. G. Stephens, Thomas Woolner, and William Rossetti (Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s brother). By mid-Victorian times some of the artists of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, and several new artists associated with the movement, had become well known, albeit quite controversial. By late Victorian times a few of the Pre-Raphaelite artists had gone surprisingly “main-stream”, seemingly “sold-out” to the same commercial interests that shanghaied the Victorian Christmas into a commercial bonanza for the department stores of Fifth Avenue. And by the closing of Victorian times, as the trenches of World War I waited in the future for an unwary Europe, the artists of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood and their works had quietly settled into the dust of obscurity.
Mixed. As one would expect, much of the criticism in the early years was hostile, sometimes vehemently so. More realistic renderings of human faces and bodies was bad enough with everyday people, but when the Pre-Raphaelites took this approach to religious figures like Mary and Christ as Millais did in his painting “Christ in the House of His Parents”, enough was enough. Charles Dickens nearly flipped out, denouncing this painting as truly, “commonplace and irrelevant”. In its day this comment would be like Steven Spielberg calling your movie a “pile of crap”. It did not bode well for the brotherhood, despite the fact that many critics had liked some of their work, especially the unmistakably gifted draftsmanship of the outlandishly precocious Millais.
Indeed, the Pre-Raphaelites would probably have slipped into early oblivion, if it had not been for the intervention of the dogmatic, yet gifted, art critic and commentator on social values, John Ruskin. Ruskin was one of the absolute “top voices” of the Victorian Era, akin to a modern day Oprah, and he soon came to the rescue of our boys. Quite simply put – he thought they were great. Here were artists painting nature exactly as God had made it. There is no need to improve on that! Far from blaspheme, from the perspective of John Ruskin, each Pre-Raphaelite painting was an adoration of the ultimate Master.Here at TISA we hope that you have enjoyed your visit to our first “Back Room” and the world of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. I think you will find that both the art and the lives of these artists are endlessly fascinating. The relationships and intrigues among themselves and the world of Chelsea, London, are rather extraordinary. For more information on the Pre-Raphaelites I highly recommend The Pre-Raphaelites by Christopher Wood, Pre-Raphaelites in Love by Gay Daly, and just about anything that Jan Marsh has written. Below are some great starting points, from both Marsh and others:
Please let us know what you thought of our first Back Room at TISA via Email. Thanks for joining us.
“Omnia exuent in mysterium”