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Friendship and Loss in the Victorian Portrait: May Sartoris by Frederic Leighton
Contributor(s): Warner, Malcolm (Author)
ISBN: 0300121350     ISBN-13: 9780300121353
Publisher: Kimbell Art Museum
OUR PRICE:   $18.95  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: September 2009
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: This original and eloquent study brings Frederic Leighton's portrait of May Sartoris to life through the artist's remarkable friendship with May's mother, celebrated opera singer Adelaide Sartoris. The young Leighton frequented Adelaide's artistic and literary salon in Rome in the early 1850s, and was on intimate terms with her by the time he painted her daughter's likeness in England around 1860. Malcolm Warner places the work both within the tradition of British child portraiture since Joshua Reynolds and within its immediate biographical setting. Bringing together much new research into the circumstances of its creation, he suggests that its wistful mood and intimations of mortality may be a reflection of Leighton's relationship with Adelaide as much as a response to his adolescent sitter. "May Sartoris "emerges as an evocation of the Romantic "child of nature," a meditation on themes of innocence and experience, and above all a testament to friendship.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Art | Individual Artists - General
- Art | History - Romanticism
Dewey: 759.2
LCCN: 2009925866
Series: Kimbell Masterpiece
Physical Information: 0.3" H x 7.6" W x 9.2" (0.80 lbs) 88 pages
 
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This original and eloquent study brings Frederic Leighton's portrait of May Sartoris to life as an expression of the artist's remarkable friendship with May's mother, celebrated opera singer Adelaide Sartoris. The young Leighton frequented Adelaide's artistic and literary salon in Rome in the early 1850s, and was on intimate terms with her by the time he painted her daughter's likeness in England around 1860. Malcolm Warner places the work both within the tradition of British child portraiture since Joshua Reynolds and within its immediate biographical setting. Bringing together much new research into the circumstances of its creation, he suggests that its wistful mood and intimations of mortality reflect Adelaide Sartoris's melancholy temperament as well as Victorian views of childhood.