Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Royal Academy
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Frances Reynolds | She was born into an English west-country professional or just-gentry family, and was a devout Anglican
, who cared about whether or not her friends went to church and disapproved of her brother Joshua painting... |
Education | Anne Ridler | Downe House had been founded at Charles Darwin
's old home by Olive Willis
, a remarkable woman who was still headmistress, who exercised an important influence on AR
, and whose biography Ridler later... |
Education | William Blake | His apprenticeship to a print-maker included training in drawing medieval tombs. He also studied for some time at the Royal Academy of Arts
. Hamlyn, Robin, and Michael Phillips. William Blake. Tate Gallery. 26 |
Education | Charlotte Brontë | Both Charlotte and Branwell aspired to become artists. She studied drawing seriously, first with a private tutor, later at Roe Head, and after her return independently, by copying romantic illustrations from annuals such as Friendship's... |
Education | Dante Gabriel Rossetti | DGR
attended King's College School
(from 1837 to 1841), where he studied with John Sell Cotman
. He led a desultory, bohemian life until in 1847, after finding the approach of the Royal Academy
stultifying... |
Education | Louisa Anne Meredith | Sir Thomas Lawrence
, President of the Royal Academy
, tutored Louisa Anne Twamley (later LAM
) privately in art. Rae-Ellis, Vivienne. Louisa Anne Meredith: A Tigress in Exile. St David’s Park. 33 |
Education | Mary Stewart | Eden Hall school buildings and the surrounding landscape would later inspire the setting for her novel The Ivy Tree. The school emphasized training in the social graces and MS
later commented that I learned... |
Education | Edith Craig | EC
studied music in Berlin with Alexis Holländer
and at London's Royal Academy
, aiming to become a concert pianist. Holledge, Julie. Innocent Flowers: Women in the Edwardian Theatre. Virago. 110 Cockin, Katharine. Edith Craig (1869-1947): Dramatic Lives. Cassell. 37 |
Education | Sylvia Pankhurst | SP
won a national competition for a two-year scholarship to the Royal Academy of Art
in London. Her name headed the list of competitors for the whole country Mulhallen, Jacqueline. “Sylvia Pankhurst’s Paintings: A Missing Link”. Women’s History Magazine, No. 60, pp. 35-8. 36 Romero, Patricia W. E. Sylvia Pankhurst: Portrait of a Radical. Yale University Press. 29 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Clementina Black | Her sister Emma
was a painter who won a scholarship to study with the Royal Academy
Schools. Glage, Liselotte. Clementina Black: A Study in Social History and Literature. Carl Winter. 19 Garnett, Richard. Constance Garnett: A Heroic Life. Sinclair-Stevenson. 37 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Elizabeth Rigby | ER
's husband, Charles Eastlake
, was elected President of the Royal Academy
; he also received a knighthood that autumn, changing ER
's public name to Lady Eastlake. Lochhead, Marion C. Elizabeth Rigby, Lady Eastlake. John Murray. 93 Rigby, Elizabeth. Journals and Correspondence of Lady Eastlake. Editor Smith, Charles Eastlake, AMS Press. 1: 259 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Barbara Hofland | The couple first met through their shared profession of teaching. He had some reputation as a painter, having been exhibiting at the Royal Academy
for a decade as well as in Leeds; but his health... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Elizabeth Rigby | Charles Eastlake was an established painter and extremely active in England's artistic circles. In 1842 he became the Royal Academy
's librarian. He also served as the secretary of the Fine Arts Commission
and sat... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Mary Robinson | MR
's affairs with the prince and with Fox overlapped with the beginning of what turned out to be her most enduring relationship: with Banastre Tarleton
, an army colonel and a pitiless hero in... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Caroline Leakey | Caroline's father, James Leakey
, was the son of John Leakey
who was involved in wool trading. James was an artist who painted portraits, landscapes, and small interiors, but was best known for his oil... |
Timeline
March 1755: A committee of twenty-six artists produced...
Building item
March 1755
A committee of twenty-six artists produced a plan for an Academy to improve and promote the arts.
December 1768: George III signed the papers for establishing...
Building item
December 1768
George III
signed the papers for establishing the Royal Academy of Arts
. Angelica Kauffman or Kauffmann
was among the twenty-eight founding members who first met in January 1769 to hear an address by Sir Joshua Reynolds
1770 or 1771: Scottish painter George Romney did a portrait...
Building item
1770 or 1771
Scottish painter George Romney
did a portrait of English painter Mary Moser
which shows her using the medium of oils, mark of the professional rather than the amateur.
1777: Richard Samuel engraved his Nine Living Muses...
Women writers item
1777
Richard Samuel
engraved his Nine Living Muses of Great Britain (or Portraits in the Character of the Muses in the Temple of Apollo) for Johnson's Ladies New and Polite Pocket Memorandum for 1778...
Summer 1780: The Royal Academy's first annual exhibition...
Building item
Summer 1780
The Royal Academy
's first annual exhibition to be held in the new Somerset House (built by Sir William Chambers
) topped all records, with attendance of 61,381 and receipts of £3,074.6s.
April 1781: Giuseppi Baretti sought to make the Royal...
Writing climate item
April 1781
Giuseppi Baretti
sought to make the Royal Academy
exhibitions more accessible by publishing A Guide through the Academy.
1797: The complete set of addresses delivered over...
Writing climate item
1797
The complete set of addresses delivered over the years to students at the Royal Academy
by Sir Joshua Reynolds
was published as Fifteen Discourses on Art.
Early May 1831 and 1832: Sarah Biffin exhibited at the Royal Academy...
Building item
Early May 1831 and 1832
Sarah Biffin
exhibited at the Royal Academy
under her married name of Mrs E. M. Wright. Born without arms or legs, she became a skilled painter and embroiderer, holding her brush or needle in her...
April 1838: The National Gallery moved into its new facility...
National or international item
April 1838
The National Gallery
moved into its new facility at Charing Cross.
25 November 1841: Sculptor Sir Francis Chantrey died, leaving...
Building item
25 November 1841
Sculptor Sir Francis Chantrey
died, leaving conditions in his will that after the death of his wife, more than £100,000 would be left to set up a national public collection of fine art in Britain.
1 May 1843: Richard Redgrave exhibited his painting The...
Building item
1 May 1843
7 May 1848: The Royal Academy exhibition presented 1474...
Building item
7 May 1848
The Royal Academy
exhibition presented 1474 works by 853 exhibitors; of these, only 126 works were by 77 female artists, a scant 10% of the total.
: The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood was founded...
Building item
Autumn1848
The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
was founded in rebellion against the constraints and techniques of art as practised by the Royal Academy
.
: Dante Gabriel Rossetti's painting The Girlhood...
Building item
Spring1849
Dante Gabriel Rossetti
's painting The Girlhood of Mary Virgin (featuring Christina Rossetti as its model) appearing at the Free Exhibition at Hyde Park Gallery
, was the first to display the initials of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
.
7 May 1849: The Royal Academy exhibition (held on the...
Building item
7 May 1849
The Royal Academy
exhibition (held on the first Monday in May) featured the first Pre-Raphaelite
works by William Holman Hunt
and John Everett Millais
.
Texts
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