Delaware Art Museum exhibit entry room
I will be attending the only U.S. museum exhibit for one of the most forgotten and possibly still unknown female artists of the nineteenth-century, Marie Spartali Stillman (1844–1927). Some museum exhibit details: Poetry in Beauty: The Pre-Raphaelite Art of Marie Spartali Stillman runs from November 7,2015 - January 31,2016,Delaware Art Museum, located in Wilmington, Delaware. It is about two anda half hours outside of New York City by public transportation. Just to give you an idea of the location.
Marie Stillman (nee Spartali) by unknown photographer, snapshot print, circa 1921, NPG
Marie Spartali Stillman (1844–1927) was one of a small number of
professional female artists working in the second half of the 19th
century. She was an important presence in the Victorian art world of her
time and closely affiliated with members of the Pre-Raphaelite circle. Poetry in Beauty,
the first retrospective of Spartali Stillman’s work, will showcase
approximately 50 works by the artist. Spartali Stillman’s style reflects
her British Pre-Raphaelite training as well as the influence of
Renaissance art, derived from the many years she lived and worked in
Italy. Works from public and private collections in the United States,
United Kingdom, and Canada, many of which have not been exhibited since
Spartali Stillman’s lifetime, will also be on view.
Marie Stillman (nee Spartali) by unknown photographer, snapshot print, undated, NPG
Poetry in Beauty: The Pre-Raphaelite Art of Marie Spartali Stillman
is co-curated by Margaretta Frederick, Chief Curator and Annette
Woolard-Provine Curator of the Delaware Art Museum’s Bancroft Collection
of Pre-Raphaelite Art, and Pre-Raphaelite scholar Jan Marsh. The
Delaware Art Museum is the only United States venue for this landmark
exhibition. It will travel, in reduced format, to the Watts Gallery,
Compton, Guildford, England, where it will be on view March 1 – June 5,
2016. (Delaware Art Museum)
6 comments:
Oh, what a wonderful exhibition to get to see! Maybe I will get to see some of hers one day! I have more hope now that we have had a Julia Margaret Cameron exhibition in Australia!
Hi Laura,
I hope you got to see the Julia Margaret Cameron exhibit in Australia. I would love to hear all about it. You know, this exhibit will be at Watts Gallery in Compton, Surrey, England, next March 2016. Hopefully, you can take a trip and visit the exhibit. Thank you so much for commenting :)
Thanks for such an interesting piece plus the reference to your previous article. I am so glad that Stillman is getting her own exhibition and thanks for the information that it is transferring to the Watt gallery next year. I doubt if she has ever had an exhibition in the UK. Technically I think she was as good as Rossetti, Hunt, Millais and Waterhouse. She really deserves to be in the same league as them. Also I think she was quote often used as a model by Rossetti as well. In this respect I suppose she differs from most of the pre-raphaelite models who were mainly from a working class background, whereas Stillman was educated and quite wealthy.
Hi WoofWoof,
I am really excited to see this exhibition. I'm so glad my links worked. I had such formatting trouble. I'm so happy this exhibit is coming to the Watts Gallery. It's such a beautiful space as well. Yes, I would put her up there along side Rossetti. Yes, she was one of the women in Rossetti's painting, Dantes Dream, 1871. The woman on the far right, the tall redhead standing up would be her! Also, she was the one woman in Rossetti's A Vision of Fiammetta, 1878.
Thank you so much for stopping by and leaving a comment.
Hello Kimberly. Just to say that we went to see the exhibition at the Watt Gallery. It was wonderful to see the beautiful paintings - so skillfully rendered. I think she was as good as Millais and Waterhouse! It was my visit to the Watt Gallery - wonderful to see the original cast for the statue of Tennyson outside Lincoln Cathedral, and some of my favourite Watt paintings - I love the one called "Hope" if you know it. The Stillman exhibition was quite small, maybe 10-15 paintings in a single room, certainly doesn't look as big or impressive as your picture from Delaware. Thanks again for recommending it. I will certainly visit The Watt Gallery again and do the guided tour of his house. Yesterday evening, I was out with some friends - I was quite surprised that none of them had even heard of GF Watt.
Hi WoofWoof,
I'm so happy you went to Watts Gallery to see the exhibit. How exciting. Thanks so much for telling me.
Post a Comment