| Dante
Gabriel Rossetti
Biography
Who2 Biography:Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Poet / Artist
- Born: 12 May 1828
- Birthplace: London, England
-
Died: 9 April 1882
- Best Known As: Romantic poet and painter of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
Name at birth: Gabriel Charles Dante Rossetti Dante
Gabriel Rossetti helped found the English Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, a
school of painting (1848) that advocated a return to the Italian style
before Raphael. Rossetti was also a well-known romantic poet and was famous for lyric poems such as The Blessed Damozel. His paintings are noted for their luxurious detail and beatific depictions of the feminine.
Rossetti shares a name with, but is unrelated to,
the poet Dante Alighieri.
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia:Dante Gabriel Rossetti
(born May 12, 1828, London, Eng. — died April 9, 1882, Birchington-on-Sea, Kent) British painter and poet. Son of Gabriele Rossetti and brother of Christina Rossetti, he trained at the Royal Academy but vacillated between painting and poetry. As an informal pupil of Ford Madox Brown, he absorbed Brown's admiration for the German Nazarenes. In 1848, with several friends, he formed the Pre-Raphaelite
Brotherhood, a group of painters treating religious, moral, and
medieval subjects in a naturalistic style. Rossetti expanded the
Brotherhood's aims by linking poetry, painting, and Social Idealism and
by treating "Pre-Raphaelite" as synonymous with a romanticized medieval
past. When his oil paintings were severely criticized, he turned to
watercolours based on literary works, which he could more easily sell to
acquaintances, and became very successful. The group broke up in 1852,
but Rossetti revived it in 1856 with Edward Burne-Jones and William
Morris. After the death of his long-ailing wife in 1862, possibly by
suicide, literary themes gave way to pictures of women, particularly
Morris's wife, Jane. His poetry, including the sonnet sequence "The
House of Life," was widely admired. He broke with Morris in 1875 over
his love for Jane and spent his later years as an alcoholic recluse.
For more information on Dante Gabriel Rossetti, visit Britannica.com. The English painter and poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti
(1828-1882) was a cofounder of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. His works
show an impassioned, mystic imagination in strong contrast to the banal
sentimentality of contemporary Victorian art. Born
on May 12, 1828, of Anglo-Italian parentage, Dante Gabriel Rossetti was
steeped throughout childhood in the atmosphere of medieval Italy, which
became a major source of his subject matter and artistic inspiration.
After 2 years in the Royal Academy schools he worked briefly under Ford
Madox Brown in 1848. Shortly after Rossetti joined William Holman
Hunt's studio later that year, the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood was
formed, in Hunt's words, "to do battle against the frivolous
art of the day." An association of artists so varied in artistic style,
technique, and expressive spirit as the Pre-Raphaelites could not long
survive, and it was principally owing to Rossetti's forceful, almost hypnotic
personality that the Brotherhood held together long enough to achieve
the critical and popular recognition necessary for the success of its
crusade. His Paintings Rossetti did not have the natural technical proficiency
that is evident in the minute detail and brilliant color of a typical
Pre-Raphaelite painting, and his early oil paintings, the Girlhood of Mary Virgin (1849) and the Ecce Ancilla Domini (1850), were produced only at the expense of great technical effort. In the less demanding medium of watercolor,
however, Rossetti clearly revealed his intense, compressed imaginative
power. The series of small watercolors of the 1850s culminates in such
masterpieces as Dante's Dream (1856) and the Wedding of St. George and the Princess Sabra (1857), characteristic products of Rossetti's inflamed sensibility, with typically irrational perspective and lighting, glowing color, and forceful figures. In
almost all his paintings of the 1850s Rossetti used Elizabeth Siddal as
his model. Discovered in a hatshop in 1850, she was adopted by the
Brotherhood as their ideal of feminine beauty. In 1852 she became
exclusively Rossetti's model, and in 1860 his wife. Beset by growing melancholy, she committed suicide 2 years later. Rossetti buried a manuscript of his poems in her coffin, a characteristically dramatic gesture which he later regretted. Beata Beatrix
(1863), a posthumous portrait of Elizabeth Siddal, the Beatrice to his
Dante, is one of Rossetti's most deeply felt paintings: it is his last
masterpiece and the first in a series of symbolical female portraits,
which declined gradually in quality as his interest in painting
decreased. His Poetry Although early in his
career poetry was for Rossetti simply a relaxation from painting, later
on writing gradually became more important to him, and in 1871 he wrote
to Ford Madox Brown, "I wish one could live by writing poetry. I think
I'd see painting d - - d if I could… ." In 1861 he published his
translations from Dante and other early Italian poets, reflecting the
medieval preoccupations of his finest paintings. In 1869 the manuscript
of his early poems was recovered from his wife's coffin and published
the next year. Rossetti's early poems under strong Pre-Raphaelite
influence, such as "The Blessed Damozel" (1850; subsequently revised)
and "The Portrait," have a sensitive innocence and a strong mystical
passion paralleled by his paintings of the 1850s. As his interest in
painting declined, Rossetti's poetic craftsmanship improved, until in his latest works, such as "Rose Mary" and "The White Ship" (both included in Ballads and Sonnets, 1881), his use of richly colored word textures achieves a sumptuous grandeur of expression and sentiment. At
his death on April 9, 1882, Rossetti had reached a position of artistic
prominence, and his spirit was a significant influence on the cultural
developments of the late 19th century. Although his technique was not
always the equal of his powerful feeling, his imaginative genius earned
him a place in the ranks of English visionary artists. Further Reading The most recent work on Rossetti is G. H. Fleming, Rossetti and the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (1967), a detailed study of his relations with the Brotherhood, which like Oswald Doughty's A Victorian Romantic: Dante Gabriel Rossetti
(1949; 2d ed. 1960) is a general biography, not a specialized work on
the paintings. Fundamental on the Pre-Raphaelites is William Holman
Hunt's firsthand account, Pre-Raphaelitism and the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (2 vols., 1905). Also important are Robin Ironside, Pre-Raphaelite Painters (1948); T. S. R. Boase, English Art, 1800-1870 (1959); and John Dixon Hunt, The Pre-Raphaelite Imagination, 1848-1900 (1968). Additional Sources Ash, Russell. Dante Gabriel Rossetti, New York: H.N. Abrams, 1995. Dobbs, Brian. Dante Gabriel Rossetti: an alien Victorian, London: Macdonald and Jane's, 1977. Faxon, Alicia Craig. Dante Gabriel Rossetti, New York: Abbeville Press, 1989. Nicoll, John. Dante Gabriel Rossetti, New York: Macmillan, 1976, 1975. Waugh, Evelyn. Rossetti, his life and works, Norwood, Pa.: Norwood Editions, 1978. |