الثلاثاء، 23 أكتوبر 2012

Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale English (1871-1945











































  

































Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale English (1871-1945
Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale (1871-1945) is an English artists associated with the Golden Age of Illustration. The Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale Collection at Spirit of the Ages includes art images from some of her seminal work. As a valuable reference resource, options are also provided for purchasing a range of gifts, including reproduction prints, posters and greeting cards. Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale was born into a family of means and she took her education in art at the Royal Academy school. It was while attending the Royal Academy that she met Byam Shaw - a prominent artist - whom was not only a close friend, but also an artistic influence. The comment from The Times (14 March, 1945) following her death provides a summary of her life and achievements, thus: A Versatile Artist. Miss Fortescue-Brickdale RWS, painter, modeller, and designed of stained glass, and black and white artist died on March 10th as briefly announced in our columns yesterday. She was the last survivor of the late Pre-Raphaelite painters, who though - or possibly because - they did not come into personal contact with the original Brotherhood, carried some of their principles to extremes. Her nearest affinity was with the late Byam Shaw, in the period of his Loves Baubles, and she was at the height of her reputation about the same time as he. It was the allegorical side of Pre-Raphaelitism that Miss Fortescue-Brickdale inherited, and her work was distinguished by brilliance of colour and great fidelity to detail. One of her most successful pictures The Deceitfulness of Riches, is crowded with detail of patterned garment and fruiting trees. As the title suggests there is often a moral of symbolic meaning behind her pictures. Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale, youngest daughter of the late Mr M I Fortescue-Brickdale, barrister of Lincoln's Inn was born in 1871. She studied at Crystal Palace School of Art, and at the Royal Academy Schools, where in 1896 she won a £40 prize for her design for the decoration of a public building. Her first appearance in a Royal Academy Summer Exhibition was made the following year. She continued to exhibit there fairly frequently, her contributions including several portraits. Her pictures were also seen at the Royal Watercolour Society, but the highly wrought nature of her work kept her from being a prolific exhibition artist. Decorative illustration was her natural bent, and typical works of hers were The Forerunner in which Leonardo da Vinci was depicted showing his model of a lying machine to the Duke of Milan, and The First visit of Simonetta. For the first British Empire Exhibition in 1924 she painted the reredos in the Chapel of Remembrance. She is represented in the permanent collection of Liverpool, Leeds, and Birmingham. As might be expected from the character of her pictures with their brilliant colours and sharp drawing, Miss Fortescue-Brickdale was successful as a designer of stained glass, and there is a window by her in Bristol Cathedral. In his English Pre-Raphaelite Painters, their associates, and successors in 1910 Percy Bates says that she should do much in the future to exemplify the still living force of Pre-Raphaelitism. Whether or not that prediction was fulfilled, she deserves to be remembered for her consistent fidelity to the tradition.

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