The Irish Mail on Sunday

KATHRYN HUGHES

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‘Many of these “sisters” had significan­t artistic skills themselves’

long, unhappy relationsh­ip with D G Rossetti before killing herself as a result of his infidelity, was a fine artist in her own right.

Morris, meanwhile, was more than just an exquisite face. While her dramatic looks provided constant inspiratio­n both to her husband William Morris and to her lover Rossetti, her skill as an artistic needlewoma­n went a long way towards fixing in the general public’s imaginatio­n the PreRaphael­ite

aesthetic: medieval tapestry motifs reimagined for the industrial age.

Not all the ‘sisters’ found such satisfacti­on. Georgiana BurneJones, a middle-class minister’s daughter who married Edward Burne-Jones, admitted that she had ‘fallen behind’ her husband when it came to artistic achievemen­t because it didn’t seem worth investing in her ‘tolerable skill’ when she was surrounded by such stand-out genius. Today, we would wonder whether she was limiting herself because she was worried about outshining her husband.

Marsh is too scrupulous a scholar to pretend that every woman who crossed paths with the Pre-Raphaelite­s was a genius oppressed by the patriarchy. On the other hand, she has found some extraordin­ary stories about the ways in which these women contribute­d to what was still a family business – ordering paints, making costumes, sending out invoices, fixing lunch for everyone in the studio. This is popular art history at its best.

Pre-Raphaelite Sisterhood Jan Marsh Quartet €25.65 ★★★★★

The working-class women who modelled for, and even married, members of the Pre-Raphaelite artistic circle were usually portrayed as little more than groupies. With their luscious curly hair, bee-stung lips and Insta-brows, beauties such as Jane Morris, Lizzie Siddal and Fanny Cornforth may take up a lot of canvas, but they don’t get much credit for being equal partners in the making of some of the most revolution­ary art of the Victorian era.

Instead these ‘stunners’, as they were condescend­ingly known, are consigned to the role of ‘muse’, a passive creature whose job it was to sit and suffer and stir up their Great Men to new levels of creative expression. No wonder so many of them came to a sticky end: Siddal committed suicide,

Morris endured year of depression and Cornfourth finished her days in a lunatic asylum.

But to write these women off as victims would be a huge mistakes, argues pioneering art historian Jan Marsh in this seminal work, which has been reissued to coincide with a major exhibition on now at the London’s National Portrait Gallery (until January 26). Instead, using the latest biographic­al research to update her classic study of the women who lived alongside Pre-Raphaelite Brothers, Marsh shows that many of these 'sisters' had significan­t artistic skills themselves, not to mention a fair degree of ambition. Sidal who had a

 ??  ?? ‘stunners’: The Bower Meadow by D G Rossetti, featuring Marie Spartali Stillman and Alexa Wilding
‘stunners’: The Bower Meadow by D G Rossetti, featuring Marie Spartali Stillman and Alexa Wilding

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