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Victorian Art in Britain |
John
Roddam Spencer Stanhope
1829 - 1908
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Stanhope came from an aristocratic, monied background, and was educated, unsurprisingly, at Eton and Oxford. It would be wrong to imagine that his privileged background gave him an easy entre into the world of art, as his parents were opposed to his becoming an artist, and actively discouraged his artistic ambitions. Though older than Burne-Jones, Stanhope was strongly influenced by him and was initially a follower of his. As he matured as an artist the painter developed his own distinctive style. His works were allegorical and mythical, and he was a great colourist. Initially Stanhope studied with G F Watts, with whom he visited Italy twice in the 1850s. He worked on the unsuccessful murals at the Oxford Union in the also in the 1850s, meeting Rossetti at this time. The painter sometimes exhibited at the Royal Academy, though he mainly used the Grosvenor, the Dudley, and the New galleries. Stanhope
suffered severely from asthma, and as a result moved to live in Florence in
1880. Burne-Jones felt that Stanhope’s art suffered from his move to
Italy, which took him away from his artistic milieu, and the painter
regarded himself as an exile. Florence remained his home for the rest of his
life, and he painted frescoes in the Anglican church there. Stanhope was the
uncle and teacher of
the painter Evelyn de Morgan nee Pickering (1855-1919). I always feel
that the Stanhope, Strudwick, and Evelyn de Morgan who were all influenced
by Burne-Jones, produced beautiful decorative pictures of a very high
standard. Recently
the de Morgan Foundation left Old Battersea House, and set up its own
museum. To finance this move the Stanhope pictures it held in its
collections were, controversially sold, and failed to reach their expected
price.
I note from a report in The
Daily Telegraph on Monday 27th January 2003, that “Love and
The Maiden,” often held to be Stanhope’s masterpiece has been purchased
from the Australian collector John Schaeffer, by the Trustees of the Fine
Arts Museums of San Francisco, for the Californian Palace of the Legion of
Honour, a museum overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge. The price paid was
greater than the £727,500 paid by Schaeffer at Christie’s in 1997. Once
again public collections in the United States have shown more awareness of
the value of Victorian art, than the pseuds and poseurs who make up a major
part of the art establishment in Great Britain. |