This is a selection of highlights from 'Beyond the Brotherhood: The Pre-Raphaelite Legacy'. Starting in Renaissance Italy and ending with artwork from the 'Game of Thrones' TV show, the exhibition aims to demonstrate how this avant-garde movement has impacted on art and artists ever since, even inspiring fantasy artists, illustrators and film makers today. Presented chronologically, this Curation features works in the collections of the Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum and Southampton City Art Gallery as well as from lenders to the exhibition. This exhibition was made possible with a grant from the Weston Loan Programme with Art Fund.

16 artworks

1864

Venus Verticordia
Image credit: Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

Venus Verticordia

From the mid-1860s, Rossetti painted a succession of ravishing maidens, hymns to beauty, exemplified by Venus Verticordia [The Changer of Hearts]. Venus Verticordia was supposed to turn a girl’s heart away from lust to chastity. Yet according to his sonnet, this sensuous painting was meant to turn the hearts of men to love:

Alas! The apple for his lips, - the dart That follows its brief wetness to his heart...

The fluttering butterflies in the goddess’s halo recall the transience of life; they were seen to embody the soul. In the Language of Flowers, the honeysuckle signified the ‘bonds of love’.

Venus Verticordia 1864–1868
Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828–1882)
Oil on canvas
H 81.3 x W 68 cm
Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

1854

Afterglow in Egypt
Image credit: Southampton City Art Gallery

Afterglow in Egypt

In 'Afterglow in Egypt' the fragile vessel held aloft by the young girl confirms her purity. She might resemble an Egyptian goddess of plenty, but Hunt intended this image of fecundity to be a warning; even great civilisations can fade away. Every object, a material fact, was intended to express a moral truth. You must study every meticulously rendered detail to understand his meaning. A lily signified the Virgin’s virginity, an apple foretold the fall of Adam and Eve. Dogs were equated with fidelity, while a black cat was the witch’s familiar. Victorian audiences were familiar with such symbols, which were derived from the Bible and ancient mythology.

Afterglow in Egypt 1854
William Holman Hunt (1827–1910)
Oil on canvas
H 185.4 x W 86.3 cm
Southampton City Art Gallery

1878

The Bride of Lammermoor
Image credit: Bristol Museums, Galleries & Archives

The Bride of Lammermoor

Knowing their appeal, Millais favoured subjects from popular novels. Here he successfully captures a dramatic moment in Sir Walter Scott’s 'The Bride of Lammermoor' (1819). Yet another of his star-crossed couples, Edgar, Master of Ravenswood, has just rescued Lucy, the daughter of his enemy Sir William Ashton, from a wild bull.

In the 1860s, Millais began to paint in a broader style. While his former comrades saw this as selling-out for profit and fame, Millais reasoned his new found boldness grew from increasing confidence.

The Bride of Lammermoor 1878
John Everett Millais (1829–1896)
Oil on canvas
H 151.1 x W 107.3 cm
Bristol Museums, Galleries & Archives

1880

Love Betrayed
Image credit: Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

Love Betrayed

Moving permanently to Florence in 1880, Stanhope fell completely under the sway of the early Italian Renaissance masters. He developed an allegorical language of complex symbols; a blind cupid is about to fall through a gap in the bridge. Cupid has been duped either by false love or false hope. In the background, a bevy of cupids is seen falling down a cliff; their attempt to stave off disaster is futile.

Love Betrayed 1883–1884
John Roddam Spencer Stanhope (1829–1908)
Watercolour & bodycolour on card
H 80.5 x W 53 cm
Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

1886

Aurora Triumphans
Image credit: Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

Aurora Triumphans

The theme of this painting, the Goddess of Dawn overcoming the bonds of Night, reflected De Morgan’s spiritual beliefs; like many of her generation she was attracted to mysticism and theosophy. Following her marriage to the ceramicist William De Morgan (1839–1917) in 1877, the couple began a prolonged ‘experiment’ with automatic (or trance) spirit writing. 'Aurora Triumphans' was exhibited at the Grosvenor Gallery in 1886. This rival to the Royal Academy provided a platform for women artists.

Aurora Triumphans 1886
Evelyn De Morgan (1855–1919)
Oil on canvas
H 114.5 x W 170.5 cm
Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

1887

Drawing Room, 1a Holland Park
Image credit: Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

Drawing Room, 1a Holland Park

Today, many Pre-Raphaelite works are in major public institutions. However, they were originally destined to beautify Victorian homes. Anna Alma-Tadema’s painting offers us a glimpse of the ‘House Beautiful’, recording the home of Aglaia Coronio (1834–1906) a member of London’s influential Greek community. The painting within the painting, Rossetti’s Study for Mariana (1868), is surrounded by all manner of striking objet d’art; Indian and Persian metalwork, precious Persian rugs and porcelain and pottery from China and Japan. Acquired by Sir Merton Russell-Cotes (1835–1921) in 1893, this painting may have inspired his own House Beautiful, now the Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum.

Drawing Room, 1a Holland Park 1887
Anna Alma-Tadema (1867–1943)
Watercolour & bodycolour on paper
H 27 x W 18 cm
Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

1900

Apres?
Image credit: Royal Academy of Arts

Apres?

Southampton-born Gregory achieved fame with Boulter’s Lock (1897), which shows the Victorians at play. Its success ensured his election to the Royal Academy. Yet his diploma work was 'Après?' in which the model is beautifully attired in historical costume. Perhaps he was trying to prove a point, not only his ability to render silks and satins but also to be poetic. The enigmatic title may refer to a song 'Après un Rêve' (After the Dream) by Gabriel Fauré and Romain Bussine (1878). Gregory’s model, who has been acting out a fantasy, must now return to the real world.

Apres? 1900
Edward John Gregory (1850–1909)
Oil on canvas
H 128.4 x W 92.2 cm
Royal Academy of Arts

1905

The Lady Shinain at the Well of Knowledge
© the copyright holder. Image credit: Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

The Lady Shinain at the Well of Knowledge

According to Irish myth the Lady Shinain, the granddaughter of the sea god Lir, went to Connla's Well to receive wisdom. This caused the well to burst and she was drowned. The resultant flood became the River Shannon. Meave O'Byrne-Doggett trained at the Dublin School of Art, which taught art through a variety of medium including textiles and enamel.

The Lady Shinain at the Well of Knowledge 1905–1915
Meave O'Byrne-Doggett (1883–1968)
Enamel on copper
H 18.5 x W 35.5 cm
Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

1907

Vanity
© the copyright holder. Image credit: Royal Academy of Arts

Vanity

A Vanitas painting, with its symbols of transience, was intended to remind you of the brevity of life. However, Cowper’s painting is really an ode to beauty. Despite her virtuous downcast eyes, the model is slyly looking at herself in the mirror. The serpentine pattern on her dress, which echoes a famous painting by Giulio Romano (1499–1546), suggests this sorceress is likely to bewitch you with her beauty.

Vanity 1907
Frank Cadogan Cowper (1877–1958)
Oil on panel
H 57.1 x W 38.1 cm
Royal Academy of Arts

1915

Maria Virgo
Image credit: Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

Maria Virgo

In 'Maria Virgo' the inscribed nimbus fulfils its traditional role, symbolising the sanctity of the Virgin Mary. The floral attribute, an annunciation lily, signifies Divine Love. The three fully opened blooms represent the Trinity: God the Father, God the Son and the Holy Spirit. Cooksey converted to Roman Catholicism at the age of twenty.

Maria Virgo 1915
May Louise Greville Cooksey (1878–1943)
Oil on board
H 39.5 x W 29.5 cm
Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

1916

Central Park, New York
© the artist's estate / Bridgeman Images. Image credit: Bridgeman Images

Central Park, New York

Armfield and his wife, the playwright Constance Smedley (1876–1941), spent the First World War in America. The charmingly archaic 'Central Park, New York' dates to this period. Its deliberate naivety, lack of perspective, clear outlines and bold colours, recalls Italian quattrocento paintings.

Central Park, New York 1916
Maxwell Ashby Armfield (1881–1972)
Tempera on canvas
H 64.2 x W 39 cm
Southampton City Art Gallery

1921

Remembering Happier Things
Image credit: Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

Remembering Happier Things

At the age of 61, Ford surprised his friends by marrying a young war widow, Emily Amelia Hoff, who modelled for this melancholic painting. The verse by Tennyson mournfully reads: ‘This is truth the poet sing’s That a sorrow’s crown of sorrow is remembering happier things’ Is our lady looking back to life before the War or even still mourning for her first husband? Pre-Raphaelite romanticism acquired a new resonance in post-war Britain, taking its legacy into the twentieth century.

Remembering Happier Things 1921
Henry Justice Ford (1860–1941)
Watercolour on paper
H 62.3 x W 37 cm
Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

1935

At the Well of Samaria
Image credit: Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

At the Well of Samaria

One of the original aims of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood was to ‘have genuine ideas to express’. The Gospel tale of the Samaritan woman at the well is one of redemption. The Jews and the Samarians were bitter enemies. Jesus asks the woman, who we later learn is sinful, for a drink. She is surprised but he replies ‘I would give you living water… Whoever drinks my water will never need more. My water will be like a stream that gives eternal life’.

As the leader of the Birmingham Group of Artist-Craftsmen, Southall led the revival of painting in tempera from the 1890s. In tempera, coloured pigments are bound with a water-soluble binder such as egg-yolk.

At the Well of Samaria 1935
Joseph Edward Southall (1861–1944)
Tempera on canvas
H 91 x W 99 cm
Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

1941

'I had a little nut tree'
© Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum. Image credit: Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

'I had a little nut tree'

Beaumont largely worked in tempera, favouring fairy stories and nursery rhymes such as 'I had a little nut tree'. In the background, the King of Spain’s daughter is descending the steps:

I said, 'So fair a princess Never did I see, I'll give you all the fruit From my little nut tree.'

'I had a little nut tree' 1941
Elfreda Gertrude Beaumont (1891–1987)
Tempera on panel
H 131 x W 80.5 cm
Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

1940

And on a Bright Day Years Ago One Might Have Beheld a Pleasing Crowd like This, Indulging in the Noble Pastime of Falconry near Corfe Castle in the Beauteous Isle of Purbeck
© the copyright holder. Image credit: Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

And on a Bright Day Years Ago...

Born in Southbourne-on-Sea, Isabel Saul studied at the Bournemouth School of Art. Her sister Mary contributed the calligraphy which enhances many of her canvases. Corfe Castle in the Beauteous Isle of Purbeck is inscribed ‘And, on a bright day, years ago one might have beheld a pleasing crowd like this indulging in the noble pastime of falconry near Corfe Castle in the Beauteous Isle of Purbeck’. The ‘pleasing crowd’ are gaily dressed in Elizabethan costume.

1981

The Owl and the Pussycat
© Peter Blake. All rights reserved, DACS 2024. Image credit: Bristol Museums, Galleries & Archives

The Owl and the Pussycat

Peter Blake was a founding member of The Brotherhood of Ruralists which broke on to the art scene in 1976. They revived the English Pastoral tradition by looking back to the Pre-Raphaelites, William Shakespeare (1564-1616) and poets such as Edward Lear (1812-1888) and William Wordsworth (1770–1850).

Poet-painter Edward Lear provides the theme for 'The Owl and the Pussycat' who went to sea ‘in a beautiful pea-green boat’. Best known for his nonsense-rhymes, Lear moved in Pre-Raphaelite circles, being taught to paint in oils by Hunt.

The Owl and the Pussycat 1981–1983
Peter Blake (b.1932)
Tempera on hardboard
H 27.3 x W 31.8 cm
Bristol Museums, Galleries & Archives