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Category: British art
Jean-Marie Leclair: Flute Concerto in C major
Hear More Watch full video HERE See More Philip de Laszlo At Sunnyside Philip de László at Christie’s Philip de László at ArtUK Philip de Laszlo at wikimedia Philip de Laszlo at Philip Mould and Co Read More Philip de Laszlo at wikiwand Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside
Mozart: String Quartet No. 21 in D major, K. 575
Sharp is primarily celebrated for her sundrenched landscapes such as the present painting. The critic for The Artist stated in April 1935 that ‘I think I can say without fear of contradiction that Dorothea Sharp is one of England’s greatest living painters. Full of sunshine and luscious colour, her work is always lively, harmonious and…
Cecilia Bartoli: La mort d’Ophélie (Berlioz)
“La mort d’Ophélie (The death of Ophelia) is “a setting of a ballad by Ernest Legouvé, based on Gertrude’s description of Ophelia’s drowning in Act IV of Hamlet. It was originally composed for solo voice and piano in 1842, but in 1848 Berlioz revised it for female choir and orchestra. The verses of Ernest Legouvé…
Hauser: Lascia Ch’io Pianga from Rinaldo (Handel)
“The present lot was executed in Rome where Marie Spartali Stillman lived with her husband William James Stillman (1828-191) who was posted there as a foreign correspondent for The Times between 1889-1896. It is very possible that the sitter in this picture is Bella Middleton the eldest of Marie’s step-daughters, who was present in Rome…
John Constable: The Hay Wain (1821)
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Annie Louisa Swynnerton: The Sense of Sight (1895)
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John Everett Millais: Isabella
“‘Isabella’ was one of the first paintings made in the new Pre-Raphaelite style. It was begun shortly after the founding of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood in 1848, when Millais was only 19. The subject is taken from a poem by John Keats (1795-1821), based on a story by the Italian writer Boccaccio (died 1375). It tells…
John William Waterhouse: Saint Cecilia (1895)
“In Christian iconography, Cecilia is the patron saint of music. The connection to music relates to the early accounts of Cecilia’s life. According to these, Cecilia did not want to hear musical instruments because she wanted to remain pure to be able to hear heavenly music. Saint Cecilia is based on a verse from Alfred…
A Tragic Self-Portrait at Sea: The Last of England by Ford Madox Brown
Art and Crit by Eric Wayne DON’T MISS FULL POST A Tragic Self-Portrait at Sea: The Last of England by Ford Madox Brown written by Eric Wayne Thanks for Visiting 🙂 ~Sunnyside
Sir Alfred James Munnings: Jogging On (1912)
“Munnings often used his own horses and groom as models and this horse, Patrick, despite his cropped tail and banged mane, was a particular favourite. On this grey day, the artist used a subdued palette yet adds life and brightness by juxtaposing the scarlet of the huntsman’s jacket with the close vivid hues of green…
Marie Spartali Stillman: The Last Sight of Fiammetta
The present work is the first of Stillman’s based on Rossetti’s translations from Boccaccio, where a sonnet entitled ‘The Last Sight of Fiammetta’ describes what seems to be the death of the beloved: Round her red garland and her golden hairI saw a fire about Fiammetta’s head;Thence to a little cloud I watch’d it fade,Than…
Alexandre Tharaud: Les barricades mystérieuses (Couperin)
I wonder what the story is behind her expression…. Is she bored? forlorn? disinterested? hopeless? Maybe some music will help. Thanks for Visiting 🙂 ~Sunnyside
Ford Madox Brown: Work (1865)
Read More Ford Madox Brown at wikiwand More about this painting at wikiwand See More Ford Madox Brown at ArtUK Ford Madox Brown at wikimedia Thanks for Visiting 🙂 ~Sunnyside
Andrew Lloyd-Webber: A Passion for the Pre-Raphaelites
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The Curse of the Lady of Shalott
Read More The Lady of Shalott at wikiwand John William Waterhouse at wikiwand See More John William Waterhouse At Sunnyside John William Waterhouse at Christie’s John William Waterhouse at Sotheby’s John William Waterhouse at wikimedia commons Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside
Donna Stewart: The Wexford Carol
Good people all, this Christmas time, Consider well and bear in mind What our good God for us has done In sending his beloved son With Mary holy we should pray, To God with love this Christmas Day In Bethlehem upon that morn, There was a blessed Messiah born. The night before that happy tide,…
John William Waterhouse: Juliet
“Here we see a lovely girl wearing a richly-coloured gown that closely resembles Mariana’s in its cut. Endowed with unusually curly hair (for Waterhouse), Juliet grasps her luxurious blue necklace nervously. She is presented in the full profile perfected by Italian Renaissance artists; for most of the 15th Century, privileged maidens ready to be married…
Leaving Home: Ford Madox Brown’s The Last of England (1855)
Read More The Last of England at wikiwand Ford Madox Brown at wikiwand Masterpiece Story: The Last of England by Ford Madox Brown, by James Singer at DailyArt The Last of England at Khan Academy See More Ford Madox Brown at ArtUK Ford Madox Brown at wikimedia A watercolor version of The Last of England…
Dame Laura Knight: Sunday afternoon in Hyde Park
See More Dame Laura Knight At Sunnyside Dame Laura Knight at ArtUK Laura Knight at Sotheby’s Laura Knight at Christie’s Read More Dame Laura Knight at wikiwand A Tragic Life: Florence Carter-Wood Dame Laura Knight: the artist who declared, ‘I paint today’ Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside
Paul Delaroche: Fake or Fortune?
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Dame Laura Knight: ‘I Paint Today’
“At the Edge of the Cliff is one of the strongest works in this clifftop series. The young woman in her striking striped blue and white skirt and white jumper has a timeless quality to her, her outfit feeling as modern to a contemporary audience as it did over 100 years ago. She stands on the…
Alfred Sisley: Matinée d’octobre près de Port-Marly (c1876)
“Painted following the First Impressionist Exhibition in April 1874—which had opened the eyes of the public to the revolutionary Impressionist aesthetic—and around the time of its second iteration which helped cement the validity of its new, modern terminology, Matinée d’octobre près de Port-Marly pays fitting homage to the movement’s pursuit of painting en plein air. Determined to capture…
Debussy’s Clair de Lune II
Clair de Lune Your soul is a chosen landscape On which masks and Bergamasques cast enchantment as they go, Playing the lute, and dancing, and all but Sad beneath their fantasy-disguises. Singing all the while, in the minor mode, Of all-conquering love and life so kind to them They do not seem to believe in…
Without Hands: Sarah Biffin II
Click here to listen to artist Alison Lapper and portrait miniatures specialist Emma Rutherford discussing the art of Sarah Biffin on the eve of the opening of “Without Hands”: The Art of Sarah Biffin. The exhibition is dedicated to the life and artistic achievemtns of this remarkable artist and is accompanied by a comprehensive catalogue as well…
Gerald Leslie Brockhurst: The War Widow (1923)
This painting was originally titled Andromache by the artist when it was painted in circa 1923 [fig. 1]. This initial title references the Greek princess recorded in Homer’s Iliad, who lost every male member of her family during the Trojan War. This portrait, painted in the aftermath of the Second World War, consequently assumes a…
Without Hands: Sarah Biffin I
“Made to accompany the exhibition “Without Hands”: The Art of Sarah Biffin (from 1 November until 21 December, 2022), this film traces the life and art of this remarkable artist and reveals how Philip Mould & Company weaved the pieces of her untold story. Sarah Biffin (1784-1850) is one of history’s most resolute, entrepreneurial, and…
Autumn: Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Leo Putz
Autumn Song By Dante Gabriel Rossetti Know’st thou not at the fall of the leaf How the heart feels a languid grief Laid on it for a covering, And how sleep seems a goodly thing In Autumn at the fall of the leaf? And how the swift beat of the brain Falters because it is…
Cyprien Katsaris: Schumann, Kinderszenen, Op. 15
0:09– From foreign Lands and People 2:11– Curious Story 3:09– Catch me if you can 3:38– Entreating Child 4:25– Perfect Happiness 5:48– An Important Event 6:40– Dreaming 9:33– By the Fireside 10:19– Knight of the Rocking-Horse 10:53– Almost too serious 12:40– Frightening 14:08– Child falling asleep 16:32– The Poet Speaks Hat Tip Many thanks to…
James Jebusa Shannon: The Flower Girl
“Painted while the artist and his family were on holiday at Eastbourne in 1900. The woman was a flower girl whom they met regularly every morning on their way down to the beach; she consented to sit to Shannon in her ordinary working clothes and is shown nursing her baby. The artist’s daughter Kitty (op….
