GB
  
You are currently viewing the United Kingdom version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
35 MIN READ TIME

THE ARTWORLD

Myths, legends and the Bible fuelled the work of Edward Burne-Jones at a time when these subjects were unpopular with Victorian industrial society. Yet his unstinting pursuit of an enchanted parallel universe heralded the symbolist movement and earned him a reputation throughout the world – the only Pre-Raphaelite to achieve such acknowledgement. The autumn exhibition at Tate Britain brings together over 150 works in various media, including painting, stained glass and tapestry.

Born in Birmingham in 1833, Burne-Jones studied theology at Exeter College, Oxford, where he met his lifelong friend, William Morris, and from where he formed an intimate society made up of a small group of friends from Birmingham known as The Brotherhood. Leaving Oxford before taking his degree, Jones and Morris determined to pursue a career in art. Industrious and wellversed in the classics, the artist honed his draughtsmanship with numerous drawings and studies for ecclesiastical stained glass, linking painting and the decorative arts in a highly distinctive way. The exhibition includes major works from across all four decades of his career – from his early stained glass windows and altarpieces – to large-scale paintings. Two rooms are dedicated to the artist’s most famous narrative cycles, the story of Perseus and the fairytale, Sleeping Beauty, shown together for the first time. The exhibition will also explore the artist’s role in the decorative arts and design, featuring embroideries, illustrated books and large-scale tapestries. A programme of talks and events accompany the exhibition. Alison Smith, former curator at Tate Britain and current head of exhibitions at the National Portrait Gallery, will introduce the themes of the exhibition at a Curator’s Talk on November 9, 6.30 to 8.30pm. Tickets £27/£22 concessions; and on December 3 and January 25 (6.30 to 8.30pm), assistant curator, Tim Batchelor, will lead an exclusive tour of the exhibition. Tickets £27/£22 concessions; www.tate.org.ukTransport yourself to the azure seas and rugged rocks of Cornwall, the bright light of a February landscape or afternoon tea in the garden (left).

Read the complete article and many more in this issue of The Artist
Purchase options below
If you own the issue, Login to read the full article now.
Single Digital Issue October 18
 
£5.99 / issue
This issue and other back issues are not included in a new subscription. Subscriptions include the latest regular issue and new issues released during your subscription. The Artist
Annual Digital Subscription £39.99 billed annually
Save
44%
£3.33 / issue
Monthly Digital Subscription £4.99 billed monthly
Save
17%
£4.99 / issue
PRINT SUBSCRIPTION? Available at magazine.co.uk, the best magazine subscription offers online.
 

This article is from...


View Issues
The Artist
October 18
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


The Artist
WELCOME from the editor
Want to comment on something you’ve read, or seen?
NEXT MONTH IN the artist
IN CONVERSATION Lucy McKie, winner of The Artist Award
SUBSCRIBE TO the artist
Enjoy over 1,000 pages of inspiration, artistic insight
PAINTERSONLINE and Barry Herniman Cloverleaf Paintbox Competition
PAINTERSONLINE and Barry Herniman Cloverleaf Paintbox
Painters Online editor’s choice
Meet this month’s The Artist editor’s choice from our PaintersOnline gallery, who receives a £50 Jackson’s Art Supplies gift voucher
PLUS
YOUR VIEWS
Email theartistletters@tapc.co.uk or write to The Editor
OPPORTUNITIES & COMPETITIONS
Check out the latest competitions to enter and make a note of important deadlines
ART BOOKS
This revised edition of Giovanni Civardi’s 1995 original
EXHIBITIONS
GALLERY OPENING TIMES AND EXHIBITION DATES CAN VARY; IF IN DOUBT, PHONE TO AVOID DISAPPOINTMENT
FEATURES
Seven go painting in Havana
Peter Brown shares his experiences of leading a reader painting holiday to Havana, and reveals the content of his travelling painting kit
Layers of time and meaning
Jeremy Gardiner’s abstract compositions are based on his observations of the natural environment and, as he tells Susie Hodge, he builds his work in layers, almost like the rock formations he is depicting, using heavy-body acrylics
Why do we make paintings?
I am in the throes of a PhD at the moment. Anyone who
PRACTICALS
Painting the seasons
Lucy Willis shares her ideas for a series of seasonal watercolour paintings and offers tips and advice for working from photographs
Arranging objects and using colours
Yael Maimon’s series on successful composition continues with advice about placing objects and using colour to achieve maximum effect, including combining photos and the Rule of Thirds
Still life
Paul Talbot-Greaves demonstrates a simple still life in acrylic to highlight an easy way to enjoy painting without getting bogged down in huge amounts of varied shapes and complexity
Colour mixing in oil
Sarah Spackman offers advice on colour mixing using oils paints, stressing that observation and cleanliness are the keys to success
Gouache in the landscape
Gouache can be used as both a transparent and opaque medium, and on a variety of supports, as Kevin Scully demonstrates
Painting the lakes
Following on from last month’s article, Ian Sidaway makes four watercolour paintings using his on-site reference material
Pulling it altogether
In the final article in this series, Martin Kinnear describes how, in trying to rediscover a part of his past, and a new way of painting, he discovered the secret of achieving his aim
Unpromising days
Geoff Hunt conquers yet another plein-air painting challenge. This time he’s making the best of those grey days when the light is flat and the scene unpromising
The wonders of wax
Camilla Clark demonstrates how to achieve luminosity and texture using cold wax and water-soluble oils
The value of monochrome
Paul Riley explains why making monochrome landscapes will help you to understand tonal relationships
Realistic greens
If you try to avoid the challenge of mixing your greens you are missing out on some amazing colours for your paintings, says Julie Collins. Her advice and the accompanying exercise will help you to improve your greens
Lamorna Birch
Glyn Macey admires the unique painting style of Lamorna Birch and demonstrates an acrylic coastal scene in his style for you to follow
The Artist Open Competition 2018
We are proud to present the work of some of our talented prizewinners in this year’s annual open competition, organised in partnership with Patchings Art Centre. Our thanks go to everyone who supported the competition and especially our generous award donors