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This page may be referred to as:
http://www.birmingham.gov.uk/burnejones
Chiefly associated with
the second generation of Pre-Raphaelites, Burne-Jones also worked closely
with designer William Morris throughout his life.
Edward Coley
Burne-Jones was born at 11 Bennetts Hill on August 28 1833. Within
days his mother, Elizabeth, died and the child was raised by his father,
also Edward, a gilder and frame maker.
While birth certificates
were not introduced until three years later, a record of his baptism at
St Philip's Church (now Birmingham Cathedral) on 1 January 1834 is stored
in the
archives of Birmingham Central Library. He later designed the magnificent
stained glass windows for St Philip's.
Burne-Jones spent the first
20 years of his life in Birmingham, then a grimy industrial town. His
earliest memories are said to have been of the city's celebrations for
Queen Victoria's coronation.
At the age of 11, the young Edward
Burne-Jones was admitted to King Edward VI School, then situated in New
Street. Demolished over 60 years ago, the building was designed by Sir
Charles Barry and Augustus Pugin, the architects responsible for the
Houses of Parliament.
According to King Edward's School's archives,
Burne-Jones was regularly at the top of his class and won many prizes,
particularly for mathematics. He also showed a talent for drawing -
including caricatures of his teachers. Some years ago, the school's
archivists discovered a series of small portraits and caricatures of
masters and pupils which many believe to be the work of the young
Burne-Jones, although experts have failed to reach a firm conclusion.
In 1853, he went up to Exeter College, Oxford, and it was here he met William
Morris. At that time, both men intended to go into the Church but, after a
tour of northern France in 1855, Burne-Jones decided to become a painter
and Morris to train as an architect. Both left Oxford without graduating.
From November 1856 he and Morris shared rooms in London at 17 Red Lion
Square, which previously had been occupied by Rossetti and Walter
Deverell. Known to early friends simply as Jones, he adopted the name of
Burne-Jones at about this time.
Apart from a few informal lessons
from Rossetti, whom he met in 1856, Burne-Jones was largely self-taught,
his early work consisting of pen and ink drawings and watercolours - all
of romantic or literary subjects. He took part in the Oxford Union mural
campaign in 1857, joined the Hogarth Club in 1858, and in the following
year made the first of four lengthy trips to Italy.
In 1860
Burne-Jones married Georgiana Macdonald, the sister of an old school
friend. Their first home was at Great Russell Street, in rooms vacated by
Henry Wallis, and they were regular guests of William and Jane Morris at
Red House, which Burne-Jones helped to decorate. He designed stained glass
for several manufacturers before becoming the principal designer for
Morris' firm, especially after its reconstitution in 1875.
Enjoying
the patronage of John Ruskin, who accompanied him and Georgiana on a
second trip to Italy in 1862, Burne-Jones began to develop a personal
style in which elements of Rossettian Pre-Raphaelitism were fused with the
influence of classical art and Old Master painting. The discipline of
drawing, preferably from the live model, was central to his art, and
became a daily practice after he settled in The Grange, Fulham, in 1867.
He had been elected an Associate of the Old Water Colour Society in 1864 -
The Merciful Knight was one of his first exhibits - but he resigned in
1870 after criticism of Phyllis and Demophoön, with its large nude male
and female figures. In the same year he narrowly survived the scandal of
an affair with one of his models, Maria Zambaco.
Concentrating
increasingly on oil painting, Burne-Jones was a major contributor to the
first exhibition of the Grosvenor Gallery in 1877, at which he achieved
sensational popular acclaim. This was echoed in France with works shown at
the Exposition Universelle in 1878. An appearance later that year as a
witness for Ruskin in the notorious libel case with James McNeill Whistler
was a less happy event.
His later work included many large oils,
such as The Golden Stairs (1880) and King Cophetua and the Beggar Maid
(1884) both in the Tate Gallery, London and several series of paintings,
notably Pygmalion and the Image, Perseus (1875-1885) and The Briar Rose.
In bringing these works to fruition, he was greatly aided from 1869 by his
studio assistant Thomas Matthews Rooke (1842-1942).
Burne-Jones
habitually reused preparatory drawings and designs for projects in
different media, from decorated tiles and pianos to jewellery and
theatrical costume, many of which are in Birmingham's collection. Two
final collaborations with Morris led to outstanding designs for
tapestries, dating from the late 1880s - the finest being the Holy Grail
series now in Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, where they are exhibited
occasionally - and a plethora of illustrations for the Kelmscott Press,
whose greatest achievement was the folio Chaucer of 1896. Reluctantly,
Burne-Jones accepted an Associateship of the Royal Academy in 1885, but
exhibited only once and resigned in 1893. In 1894, Prime Minister
Gladstone offered him a baronetcy.
Sir Edward Burne-Jones died in
Fulham on 16 June 1898 and was buried in the churchyard at Rottingdean,
Sussex, where he had a country home.
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