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Rossetti, Leighton, Millais, Hunt: 'Victorian Treasures' are in Liverpool once again.

Halls of Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool bring together more than 60 outstanding Victorian paintings and watercolors. Victorian Treasures presents the works of leading 19th-century classical artists such as Frederic Leighton, Lawrence Alma-Tadema and Edward John Poynter as well as the paintings of Pre-Raphaelite artists including John Everett Millais, Dante Gabriel Rossetti and William Holman Hunt.
Rossetti, Leighton, Millais, Hunt: 'Victorian Treasures' are in Liverpool once again.
The exhibition had some "rest" after hugely popular tour through four major cities in Japan during 2015 and 2016. And now it is ready to appear at home once again.
Albert Joseph Moore. Summer night
Summer night
1890, 132×228.5 cm
Above: A Summer Night by Albert Joseph Moore, 1885−1890. It is one of the masterpieces of English Aestheticism
The so-called “aesthetic” movement arose in Great Britain in the middle of the 19th century. It affected not only painting but also literature, fashion, architecture, and decorative art. Contrasting the pompous Victorian conservatism with the desire for beauty and self-expression, aestheticism rejected social and moralizing tendencies and proclaimed the idea of creating “art for art’s sake”. The supporters of the art movement relied on the works by the Pre-Raphaelites, medieval geometrical patterns, as well as on the pictorial traditions of Japanese masters. Wishing to make art a part of everyday life, the craftsmen invented new approaches to the manufacture of household items, such as dishes, furniture, ceramics, wallpaper, and carpets. Read more
. The artist may have been inspired by the famous Roman Portland Vase which shows women in a variety of poses and variously occupied. Moore would have seen it in the British Museum when he entered London’s Royal Academy Schools in 1858.
The Victorian period is marked by an important change in the way people viewed art. Artists focused




The Victorian period is marked by an important change in the way people viewed art. Artists focused on the imagination of the spectator and began to explore new, challenging subjects. They were attracted by fundamentals of human existence and emotional scenes inspired by legends and mythology. Artists were interested in classification, documentation, and free experiments with new ways of representing the physical world.

Left: Frederic Lord Leighton, Perseus and Andromeda, 1891.

Legend about Perseus killing the Medusa, whose magical power caused all who saw it to be turned to stone, was one the most renowned ancient myths in the Victorian era. Perseus is shown riding on a winged horse. He has come to rescue Andromeda, who is chained to a rock as sacrifice to Poseidon, God of the Sea. Leighton has shown a dramatic moment: Perseus’s arrow has just struck the dragon whose wings are spread over Andromeda.

Artists of that time adapted to the expectations of the rising middle class. The new rich merchants and industrialists could afford to become art collectors. Commerce in the art world has developed, and painters began making works that would tempt and interest potential buyers.
Helen of Troy by Anthony Frederik Sandys (1867) became the front painting of Victorian Treasures. In



Helen of Troy
by Anthony Frederik Sandys (1867) became the front painting of Victorian Treasures. In the late 1850s and 1860s the artist painted biblical, mythological and literary subjects. He was great friends with Rossetti and frequently found inspiration in his works.

Helen of Troy
is connected to an illustration Sandys made for the periodical Once a Week in 1866. Entitled Helen and Cassandra, it showed Cassandra berating Helen as Troy burns in the background. Beautiful Helen chews on a lock of hair in the manner of a spoiled child. The painting portrays the main character inflated, with the same sulky sideways glance and lowered forehead as seen in the illustration.

Left: Anthony Frederik Sandys, Helen of Troy, 1867. Walker Art Gallery.


  • William Holman Hunt, An Italian Child (Tuscan Girl Plaiting Straw), 1869. Lady Lever Art Gallery.
  • Edward John Poynter, Psyche in the Temple of Love, 1882. Walker Art Gallery.
Works of the two artists, Helen Allingham and Kate Greenaway, are of particular interest in the exhibition. Painting (and writing) was not considered a female profession in the Victorian era, and many of the ladies had to hide under male pseudonyms. However, Allingham and Greenaway succeeded, primarily as illustrators of books. Helen became the first woman to be admitted to full membership in the Royal Watercolour
Watercolour (it. “aquarello”, germ. “Aquarell”) is a well-known painting technique with water-based paints. It was invented in the 3rd century in China. Watercolours become transparent after dissolving in water, so when applied to grainy paper, the image looks airy and thin. Unlike oil paintings, watercolour paintings lack textured strokes. Read more
Society. Kate became a member of the New Society of Painters in Watercolors. Every year since 1955 the best illustrators of children’s books in the UK are being awarded the medal of her name.
Helen Allingham. Old cottage, Pinner
Old cottage, Pinner
1890-th , 28.6×38.5 cm
Helen Allingham painted her Old Cottage, Pinner landscape
The development of the genre from antiquity to the present day: how did religion and the invention of oil painting contribute to the development of the genre in Europe, and why was the Hudson River so important? Read more
in early 1890s when she was forced to support her children by herself after her husband had died.

In the late 19th century Britain experienced an agricultural depression caused by the modernisation of farming practices. The Victorians felt a sense of nostalgia for the idyllic rural life that was at risk of being forgotten. Allingham’s cottage scenes became a way of preserving this pastoral. The artist paid careful attention to styles of architecture and traditional methods of construction.
Misses, an illustration created by Kate Greenaway in 1879, also induced a sense of nostalgia. It sho




Misses, an illustration created by Kate Greenaway in 1879, also induced a sense of nostalgia. It shows two elaborately dressed young girls prepared to go out on a winter’s day. The style of their dress would have seemed old fashioned to the spectators in the second part of 19th century. Long fur lined coats and bonnets were a style from the early 19th century. The Victorians felt their life had changed quickly and they enjoyed being reminded of the recent past.


Left: Kate Greenaway, Misses, 1879. Walker Art Gallery.

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Victorian Treasures opens on 27th of January at Walker Art Gallery and will be on display till 7th of May, 2017.
Witten by Vlad Maslow on materials from the National Museums Liverpool’s official website.