Elizabeth Siddal Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal (18291862). Elizabeth Lizzie Siddal was the living, breathing epitome of the Pre-Raphaelite woman. With her sensuous full lips, http://members.tripod.com/preraphs/people/lsiddal.html
Extractions: Home Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal (1829-1862) E lizabeth "Lizzie" Siddal was the living, breathing epitome of the Pre-Raphaelite woman. With her sensuous full lips, heavy-lidded eyes, and above all her incredible waist-length auburn hair, she could only be described as a "stunner". S he was discovered by Walter Deverell in a milliner's shop in 1850. At the time he was searching for a model for Voila in his painting Twelfth Night. Later he told William Holman Hunt, By Jove! shes like a queen, magnificently tall, with a lovely figure, a stately neck, and a face of the most delicate modelling; the flow of surface from the temples over the cheek is exactly like the carving of a Pheidean goddess. Wait a minute! I havent done; she has grey eyes, and her hair is like dazzling copper, and shimmers with lustre as she waves it down. And now, where do you think I lighted on this paragon of beauty? Why, in a milliners back workroom where I went out with my mother shopping. Having nothing to amuse me, while the woman was tempting my mother with something, I peered over the blind of a glass door at the back of the shop, and there was this unexpected jewel. Art by date
Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal - Wikipedia Translate this page Ihre Eltern, der Eisenwarenhändler Charles Crooke Siddall aus Sheffield, und ihre Mutter Elizabeth Eleanor Evans waren seit dem 13. http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Eleanor_Siddal
Extractions: Wechseln zu: Navigation Suche Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal 25. Juli in Holborn London 11. Februar in London) war eine englische Malerin und Dichterin, das Lieblingsmodell der Pr¤raffaeliten und die Ehefrau des Malers Dante Gabriel Rossetti Elizabeth Siddals Nachname lautete eigentlich Siddall, doch bevorzugte sie, wohl auf Anregung Rossettis, die Schreibweise mit nur einem âlâ. Sie wurde 1829 als drittes von acht Kindern geboren. Ihre Eltern, der Eisenwarenh¤ndler Charles Crooke Siddall aus Sheffield , und ihre Mutter Elizabeth Eleanor Evans waren seit dem 13. Dezember 1824 verheiratet. Siddal wurde 1849 von dem Maler Walter Deverell in einem Modegesch¤ft, wo sie als Hutmacherin arbeitete, entdeckt. Ihre delikate, fragile Sch¶nheit und ihr h¼ftlanges, kupferfarbenes Haar lieen sie rasch zu dem vielleicht wichtigsten Modell der Pr¤raffaeliten werden, da sie wie kaum eine andere Frau deren weibliches Ideal personifizierte. John Everett Millais: Ophelia (1852) In der Folgezeit stand sie Modell f¼r William Holman Hunt (u. a. als Sylvia in
Life And Work Of Elizabeth Siddal Elizabeth Eleanor Siddall was born in 1829; she later shortened her last name to Siddal. A young woman of workingclass background, she found employment http://www.eighthsquare.com/esiddal.html
Extractions: Photograph of Elizabeth Siddal Christina Rossetti wrote this poem about her brother, the artist and poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti , and his muse, Elizabeth Siddal. For years Siddal was known primarily as the woman who modeled for Rossetti and his fellow painters and was perhaps better known for her morbid postmorten experience than for anything she accomplished in life. Today, Siddal has become a sort of feminist icon, the subject of biographies, her work resurrected by galleries and websites. Elizabeth Eleanor Siddall was born in 1829; she later shortened her last name to "Siddal." A young woman of working-class background, she found employment as an assistant to a milliner. In 1849, a young artist named Walter Deverell happened to walk into the shop and asked her employer if her assistant would model for him.
Phryne - Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal (18291862) biographical note, see Pre-Raphaelite Women Artists. Works by Siddal at The Tate Gallery. Complete list of pictures http://www.phryne.com/artists/03-89-18.HTM
Extractions: Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal Discovered as a model by Rossetti in and intermittently trained by him as a painter. After many shenanigans, he married her out of conscience in , but this was generally felt to be 'too late'. She had a stillborn child in and died from an overdose of laudanum in . Rossetti famously buried his poems in her grave, only to have them disinterred later.
Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal Fine art prints available Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal siddal elizabeth eleanor The Lady of Shalott. Artist painter Artistic style Title Article ID http://www.art-prints-on-demand.com/a/siddal-elizabeth-eleanor.html
Extractions: ORDER Keyword search Artists (A to Z) Fine art giclee prints on canvas and oil copies from over 20,000 painters: Claude Monet Vincent van Gogh Gustav Klimt Caspar David Friedrich ... Art styles Paintings and pictures sorted by art style and period: Impressionism Expressionism Pop Art Romanticism ... Collections Exclusive choice of paintings and images: Christie's Photos of nature Architecture Contemporary ... Fine art prints Back to the homepage for art prints on canvas, posters and oil copies. Page : Images 1 to 3 of 3 matching items. Results per page
Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal sozluk.sourtimes.org/show. asp?t=elizabeth+eleanor+siddal Similar pages Siddall Family Genealogy ForumMiddlesex County, ON, CA - Elizabeth Siddall Gunter 12/25/00. Middlese County, ON, CA - Elizabeth Siddall Re U.S. Siddall Search 2000 - Eleanor 2/09/02 http://sozluk.sourtimes.org/show.asp?t=elizabeth eleanor siddal
Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal Online elizabeth eleanor siddal English PreRaphaelite Painter, ca.1829-1862 Guide to pictures of works by elizabeth eleanor siddal in art museum sites and image http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/siddal_elizabeth_eleanor.html
Exploring Elizabeth Siddal July 25, 1829 Birth of elizabeth eleanor Siddall (born at Charles Street, Hatton Garden). 1831 - Siddall family moves from Hatton Garden to Southwark (in http://www.lizziesiddal.com/
Extractions: To download the eBook right-Click on the title and select "Save Target As". Biography Poems Comments More Info ... Stats Elizabeth Siddal was born on July 25, 1829, in Holborn, London, to Charles Crooke Siddall and Elizabeth Elenor Evans Siddall. Blessed with extraordinary beauty she caught the eye of a pre-Raphaelite painter, Walter Howell Deverell, as she worked in a bonnet store in Cranbourne Alley, London. In time .. .. more >>
Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal (1834-1862) elizabeth siddal was a central figure in Rossetti s life, from their meeting some time in 1849 to his own death. Under his influence she produced http://www.victorianweb.org/painting/siddal/index.html
Extractions: Victorian Web Home Visual Arts Victorian Painters Pre-Raphaelitism Elizabeth Siddal was a central figure in Rossetti's life, from their meeting some time in 1849 to his own death. Under his influence she produced Pre-Raphaelite watercolours and drawings of a remarkable naive intensity. She worked as a milliner's assistant near Leicester Square in London before being asked by Walter Howell Deverell to model for Viola in his ' Twelfth Night Converted British Family Sheltering a Christian Missionary ' (Royal Academy 1850, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford) and Millais's ' Ophelia ' (Royal Academy 1852, Tate Gallery, London.) She posed for this in winter in a bath of inadequately heated water, and the severe cold she caught is the first we hear of the ill health that would plague her for the rest of her life. After ' Ophelia ' she sat exclusively to Rossetti. He fell in love with her and she inspired his most deeply felt drawings and watercolours. She too began to write poetry and to paint, exhibiting at the private Pre-Raphaelite exhibition at Russell Place in 1857, and the exhibition of British Art held in America in 1858. Ruskin admired her works, offered to buy all she produced, and paid for her medical treatment and travel. In the late 1850s she seems to have become estranged from Rossetti, for we read of him pursuing other 'stunners' such as Ruth Herbert, Annie Miller and Fanny Cornforth. In 1860, however, he joined her in Hastings, where she was seriously ill, and married her on the 23rd of May. The marriage, probably contracted out of duty rather than Rossetti's old great love, was not a happy one. Val Prinsep records Lizzie's jealousy of her husband, which caused her to throw his drawings of other women out of their Blackfriars apartment window into the Thames. She was often ill, behaved erratically towards his friends and family, and had a stillborn child in 1861. This behaviour was probably caused by her addiction to laudanum, a pain relieving opiate. She died of an overdose in February 1862, probably suicide.
Siddal, Elizabeth (1829-1862) www.xs4all.nl/~androom/biography/p008321.htm 2k - Cached - Similar pages elizabeth siddal - Artist, Art - elizabeth eleanor siddalelizabeth siddal AskART art price guide for elizabeth siddal and 54000+ American artists - elizabeth eleanor siddal art prices, value art, art appraisal, http://www.xs4all.nl/~androom/biography/p008321.htm
Extractions: GRAVE LOCATION London: Highgate Cemetery West Lizzy Siddal worked as a dressmaker in a shop near Piccadilly, London, when she was 'discovered' by the painter Walter Deverell, whose model she became. She also worked for William Holman Hunt ("Sylvia") and John Everett Millais ("Ophelia"). She detested Hunt after he and Frederic Stephens had convinced the painter John Tupper for fun that she was Hunt's wife. From 1852 onwards she was more than just a pupil to Dante Gabriel Rossetti: she became his muse and his lover as well. Supported by John Ruskin, who admired her work and acted as her patron, she travelled to Nice and Paris in 1855 to improve her health. In 1857 she exhibited for the first time at the preraphaelite Salon at Russel Place, London. After a long and often difficult engagement she married Rossetti in 1860. They lived in London where she worked on her watercolours and assisted in decorating William Morris' Red House. Lizzie suffered from depressions and on top of this she gave birth to a still-born daughter on May 2, 1861. On Februari 10, 1862 she dined with Rossetti and Algernon Swinburne at the Sabloniere Hotel at Leicester Square. Afterwards Lizzie went home and Rossetti went to the Working Men's Institute where he taught art. When he came home at eleven he found her unconscious from an overdose of laudanum. It was already too late to save her life and she died early in the morning. The note she left was destroyed by Madox Brown and it's contents will never be known. Rossetti buried his poems with her at Highgate Cemetery.
JSTOR Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal-The Age Problem SHORTER NOTICES Shorter Notices elizabeth eleanor siddalthe age problem BY MARION R. EDWARDS elizabeth siddal, mistress and later wife of Dante Gabriel http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0007-6287(197702)119:887<110:EESAP>2.0.CO;2-K
Extractions: BodyLoad('s'); On this page: Select Article Art Encyclopedia Wikipedia Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Art Encyclopedia b London, 25 July 1829; d London, 11 Feb 1862). English painter, model and poet. She was introduced to the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood by Walter Howell Deverell. On seeing her working in a milliner's shop in 1849, he was apparently struck by her fine and unusual appearance and asked her to model for him. She agreed and posed for the figure of Viola in his painting Twelfth Night (1849-50; London, Forbes Mag. Col.). She next modelled for William Holman Hunt, appearing in a number of his paintings dating from 1850, and then for John Everett Millais's Ophelia (1852; London, Tate). By 1852 she had met Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and by the end of the year she sat only to him. See the Abbreviations for further details.
Victorian Art In Britain elizabeth eleanor Rossetti nee siddal 18291862 elizabeth siddal became the muse of Rossetti. They lived together in an exclusive, http://www.victorianartinbritain.co.uk/muses/siddal.htm
Extractions: The unhappy woman who inspired, loved, and was loved by Dante Gabriel Rossetti.Lizzie Siddal was brought up in London, the daughter of a Sheffield cutler who had moved South. Her father seems to have been a self-employed small businessman. She was first spotted by Walter Howard Deverell an associate of the Pre-Raphaelites working in a milliners shop. Deverell was so taken with her striking appearance, that he enlisted the aid of his mother to recruit Lizzie as a model. She became a favourite early model of the PRB, who referred to her as Guggums or The Sid. The first really famous painting in which Lizzie appeared was Ophelia, by John Everett Millais. The subject of the painting is Ophelia, in Shakespeares Hamlet drowning herself, after Hamlets murder of her father. Millais purchased a ladys dress of great age for the large sum of £4.00, and Lizzie posed in it lying in a tin bath full of water. To heat the bath, the painter placed it on tressles with oil lamps underneath. Unfortunately the preoccupied painter failed to realise the lamps had gone out. The water then went cold, and poor Lizzie caught a bad cold due to the low temperature of the water. The painting is quite simply one of the greatest produced anywhere in the 19
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Elizabeth Eleanor Siddall. In Brief. Born in London on the 25th of July 1829, elizabeth eleanor siddal (the family name was siddall but she signed with a shorter spelling), daughter of a http://www.cazbo.co.uk/Siddall/SiddallBio/ElizabethEleanorSiddallBio.htm
Extractions: Born in London on the 25th of July 1829, Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal (the family name was ' Siddall' but she signed with a shorter spelling), daughter of a cutler and small businessman from Sheffield. There are no records of her education until the age of 18, where it is known that Miss Siddall was working both as a milliners apprentice and dressmakers assistant in a shop on Cranbourne Alley. She came to the attention of a Mr William Allingham, a writer who was associated with the members of the Pre-Raphaelite 'vortex', when he saw her working at the milliners. Allingham later told Walter Deverell, another artist in the vortex, who had his mother convince Miss Siddall to pose for him as Viola in his painting "Twelfth Night". Further in 1852, Miss Siddall started informal studies with Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Worked mainly in watercolours, taking inspiration from a wide variety of sources, including Shakespeare, the Bible, poets and balladeers, Miss Siddall had a tendency toward the works of Tennyson. In 1855, Mrs Tennyson even tried to get Elizabeth included in the Moxon Tennyson but was unable to do so, the official reason being that Miss Siddall was too unknown.
Siddal siddal, elizabeth eleanor (British, 18291862). Born in London in 1829, daughter of a cutler and small businessman from Sheffield. http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/biographies/MainBiographies/S/Siddal/Siddal.
Extractions: (British, 1829-1862) Born in London in 1829, daughter of a cutler and small businessman from Sheffield. No details of her education are recorded but by the age of 20 Siddal was working as a milliner and dressmaker. She was introduced to the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood as a model, sitting to Walter Deverell, William Holman Hunt and John Everett Millais Her exhibition debut was at the Pre-Raphaelite salon at Russell Place in the summer of 1857, with drawings on literary subjects and a self-portrait in oils; the watercolour Clerk Saunders was also included in the British Art show that toured the USA. In 1857-8 Siddal visited Sheffield, where she made use of the art school facilities, and Matlock in Derbyshire.
Elizabeth Siddal - Wikipedia, La Enciclopedia Libre Translate this page elizabeth eleanor siddal Rossetti (25 de julio de 1829 - 11 de febrero de 1862) fue una pelirroja modelo británica, retratada extensivamente por los http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Siddal