Art influenced by the art and themes of the Pre Raphaelites with biographies, auctions and information on these artists.
Showing posts with label Rebecca Solomon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rebecca Solomon. Show all posts
Monday, January 7, 2013
The Lion and the Mouse: Sweet Mercy Is Nobility's True Badge
The Lion and the Mouse: Sweet Mercy Is Nobility's True Badge
by Rebecca Solomon
Date painted: 1865
Rebecca Solomon (1832–1886) was born on 26 September 1832 in Bishopsgate Street, London, the second among the three children of Michael Solomon (b. 1779) and his wife, Catherine Levy (d. 1886). Her father was a businessman and prominent member of the Jewish community in the City of London. Her two brothers, Abraham Solomon and Simeon Solomon were also artists. She trained at the Spitalfields School of Design and worked as an assistant and copyist to her brother Abraham until his death in 1862. She also made copies for other artists, including Millais. Between 1850 and 1874 she exhibited widely in London and the provinces, initially in oil and then, for financial reasons, diverting to watercolour and illustrative work from 1863. Through her younger brother, Simeon, with whom she lived after Abraham's death, she came into contact with the circle of D. G. Rossetti. She was an exponent primarily of literary and historical genre, and Pre-Raphaelite influence may be seen in some of her work of the 1860s and 1870s, specifically in paintings she exhibited at the Dudley Gallery, such as Primavera (exh. 1865; priv. coll., Japan) and The Wounded Dove (exh. 1866; University College of Wales, Aberystwyth). She died in London on 20 November 1886 after having been hit by a cab in the Euston Road.
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Rebecca Solomon, London artist (blog post)
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[There seems no image of Rebbeca. The painting is
The Wounded Dove, 1866, watercolour, University of Aberystwyth.
Image courtesy of the University of Aberystwyth]
http://melbourneblogger.blogspot.com/2008/12/rebecca-solomon-artist.html
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Monday, March 9, 2009
Rebecca Solomon - The Plea
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oil on canvas
1865
Geffyre Museum
The sailor boy caught poaching may have been modelled by her brother Abraham. who died tragically early. The early deaths of her brothers may have contributed to her alcoholism and she painted no more after 1869, dying finally insane. Her other brother Simeon died even more tragically.
cf.
Solomon: A family of painters
Geffrye Museum, London, 8 November-31 ... & Art Gallery, 18 January-9 March 1986 (Paperback)
Inner London Education Authority (1986)
Simeon Solomon
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Rebecca Solomon - The Wounded Dove
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1866
University of Wales collection
Rebecca Solomon studied under her brother Abraham, then at the Spitalfields School of Design, and later worked in the studio of Millais (including making a copy of his work Christ in the House of his Parents apparently partly overpainted by Millais himself), and for Burne-Jones in the capacity of a model. From the 1850s through to the end of the 1870s she was a prolific exhibitor at the London galleries, including the Royal Academy from 1852-1869. She produced mainly portraits and history paintings, often with Christian themes, as opposed to her brother Simeon, who in the 1860s illustrated Jewish customs.
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