John Roddam Spencer-Stanhope

British, 1829 - 1908

IMAGE GALLERY

16 pictures

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BIOGRAPHY

Spencer-Stanhope was one of the most important followers of Burne-Jones. He was a member of the group of artists which worked on the Oxford Union murals. His style owes a lot to Burne-Jones, yet Stanhope's colour is stronger and less subtle, his drawing is harder and in general the softness and stillness of his master is lacking. His choice of subject-matter and interest in technique is individual. Eve Tempted (1877) is a striking and slightly unnerving interpretation of the serpent in the Garden of Eden whispering into Eve's ear as she stands under the Tree of Knowledge, on a faux-naïf early Renaissance carpet of flowers.

Stanhope was in love with the Tuscan landscape and with Florentine art, and spent the latter part of his life in Florence. His niece was the painter Evelyn De Morgan - who often travelled to stay with him in Florence.

FIND PRINTS & BOOKS

The Last Romantics: The Romantic Tradition in British Art : Burne-Jones to Stanley Spencer
Books  
Love & Death: Art in the Age of Queen Victoria
Books  
Love and the Maiden, John Roddam Spencer Stanhope
Prints on Canvas  
Charcoal Thieves, John Roddam Spencer Stanhope
Prints & Posters  
Charon and Psyche, John Roddam Spencer Stanhope
Prints & Posters  

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