Sir Edward Coley Burne-Jones, Bt., A.R.A., R.W.S. (1833-1898)
Property from descendants of Sir Edward Coley Burne-Jones (lots 101-126)Edward Burne-Jones and his wife Georgiana had a large, close family, who often provided inspiration for and were recipients of his work. Georgiana (née Macdonald), was one of four daughters of a Methodist minister. She first met Burne-Jones aged eleven, as he was a schoolfriend of her elder brother. She trained at the Government School of Design in South Kensington, chiefly to aid Burne-Jones in his career, and practised very little as an artist. Later in life she became increasingly independent and politically minded. The sisters were a remarkable family: Alice, the oldest, married John Lockwood Kipling in 1865, and was the mother of the author Rudyard Kipling. Agnes, the third daughter, married Sir Edward John Poynter, having met him through Burne-Jones and the Pre-Raphaelite circle. The fourth daughter, Louisa, married a Worcestershire ironmaster and was the mother of the prime minister Stanley Baldwin.Georgiana and Edward had two children, Philip (1861-1926) and Margaret (1866-1953). Philip became an artist himself, and an example of his work is included in the present group (lot 123). Margaret married a Scottish academic, John Mackail, and their children were the novelists Denis Mackail and Angela Thirkell. Burne-Jones often made drawings for his children, and later his grandchildren, and many of these, as well as larger and more finished works, have remained in the family.
Sir Edward Coley Burne-Jones, Bt., A.R.A., R.W.S. (1833-1898)

The Wood-Nymph

细节
Sir Edward Coley Burne-Jones, Bt., A.R.A., R.W.S. (1833-1898)
The Wood-Nymph
signed with initials 'EBJ' (lower right)
pencil, watercolour and bodycolour heightened with gold and touches of gum arabic on paper
14 3/8 x 15 5/8 in. (36.5 x 39.7 cm.)
in the original frame
来源
The artist, by whom given to his daughter,
Margaret Mackail (1866-1953), and by descent to her daughter,
Angela Margaret Thirkell (née Mackail) (1890-1966), and by descent to her son,
Graham Campbell McInnes (1912-1970), and by descent to his daughter.
展览
London, Tate Gallery, Centenary Exhibition of Paintings and Drawings by Sir Edward Burne-Jones, Bart, 1933, no. 67.
London, Christie's, Daughters of Desire, 8-16 March 2005, no. 7.

拍品专文

The Wood-Nymph, and its companion The Sea-Nymph, were subjects and compositions which Burne-Jones explored over several years. The first concept of the sea nymph was as a contribution to William Morris's Mermaid fabric in 1875. The first iteration of the two nymphs as companion pieces was in a pair of drawings, dating from 1878 and sold in these Rooms on 15 December 2010, lot 34. These were probably the pair Burne-Jones referred to in his work record in 1878: ‘three panels for low relief of wood nymph, water nymph and Hesperides’, intended to be executed in gesso for the front and ends of a cassone, possibly that made for Frances Horner in 1888, which certainly includes the Hesperides panel (now in Birmingham City Art Gallery).

The designs were revisited in 1880-3 when Burne-Jones executed two large oils, intended to hang together. From this pair, The Wood-Nymph (exhibited at the Grosvenor Gallery in 1883) is now in the South African National Gallery, Cape Town, whilst The Sea-Nymph was sold in these Rooms on 14 June 2005, lot 34.

Although John Christian dated the present drawing to circa 1880, it has significant differences from both the relief design and the oil painting. Its formalised, abstract character suggests that it may be an alternative scheme for a gesso relief, probably pre-dating the large oil. Designs for low relief were a largely private aspect of Burne-Jones’s decorative work: although in 1881 he was commissioned to design mosaics for the new American Church in Rome (see lot 125), whilst also executing designs for tapestry for William Morris, the reliefs were something he came to on his own account.

The earliest realised example of the medium appears to be the 1879 designs for reliefs in bronze he designed as memorials to the parents of his friend George Howard, 9th Earl of Carlisle, at Lanercost Priory, Cumbria. The design for one of these, The Nativity, was sold at Christie’s, New York on 24 January 2017, lot 115. Whilst those drawings are monochrome, with rich, heavy, dry brush bodycolour giving a sense of the eventual medium, the present sheet with its bold colours and lighter atmosphere is much more reminiscent of classical frescoes. He continued to make a few low reliefs in different media into the 1890s, but always for personal projects, often for family members or his closest friends.

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