Damozels & Deities
Pre-Raphaelite Stained Glass 1870-1898
£60.00
Continuing on from the acclaimed Angels & Icons, this volume, Damozels & Deities, traces the development of stained glass, viewed as an art form, from 1870 to the death of Burne-Jones in 1898.
Over this period the public’s interest in the creative arts enabled the Aesthetic Movement to flourish. Ecclesiastical windows grew more beautiful and secular in appearance, so much so that domestic glass was in many cases indistinguishable from that found in churches. There was a burgeoning of small firms as artists responded to the increased demand. Morris & Co. and Burne-Jones led the way and in parallel James Powell & Sons and Henry Holiday created an equally important body of work. Holiday and Burne-Jones, at the centre of the movement, take the greater part of the book but the work of lesser known artists including Selwyn Image, H. Arthur Kennedy, J.W. Brown, Carl Almquist, Daniel Cottier and others whose output was at times equal to their more famous contemporaries, are discussed and illustrated. In reflection of the concern to introduce beauty into everyday life the designers followed Burne-Jones in his pursuit of elegance and grace. Damozels & Deities demonstrates the Neoclassical and Japanese origins of the group and analyses the interconnections of the artists involved. It gives brief insights into their lives and the origins of the iconography they used. The Aesthetic Movement, as represented in stained glass, existed at its height for a very short time from c.1870 to c.1890. A relative uniformity of style and intent unified the group. Afterwards Burne-Jones and Holiday, who had set the pace, in their maturity continued to develop with an individualism which was a logical and crowning achievement. It is the intention of author and photographer to make this important oeuvre better known, thus creating a desire to visit and protect these works of art.
publisher:
Seraphim Press
pages:
404p
Publication Date:
2017 July
format:
Hardback; 280 x 210mm
ISBN:
9780993404504