The Flower Book by Edward Burne-Jones (1833–1898) is a series of 38 round watercolours, each about six inches (15 centimetres) across, painted from 1882 to 1898. The paintings do not depict flowers; rather, they were inspired by the flowers' names. Burne-Jones called them "a series of illustrations to the Names of Flowers". "Not a single flower itself appears", according to his wife Georgiana.[1] They were painted for his private pleasure, many while he was resting at his summer home in Rottingdean, and were described by his wife as the "most soothing piece of work that he ever did".[1][2] In 1905 Georgiana, by then a widow, published a limited edition of high-quality colour facsimiles.
Themes and technique
editWorked in watercolours, bodycolour (or gouache), and gold paint, the paintings reflect the landscape around Rottingdean and include favourite themes from Burne-Jones's work: Witches' Tree (no. xv) revisits the subject of The Beguiling of Merlin and Meadow Sweet (no. xxxv) features the central figures from The Last Sleep of Arthur in Avalon.[2]
Burne-Jones collected folknames of flowers from many sources, but the greatest number were provided by Eleanor Leighton, Lady Leighton Warren, who shared her "knowledge of the names and legends belonging to flowers".[3] In a letter to her, he wrote:
Pray send me as many names as ever you can, for alack it is not one in ten that I can use. Of course I could make pictures to all, but I want the name and the picture to be one soul together, and indissoluble, as if they could not exist apart; so many lovely names and nothing to be done with them.[4]
In a later letter, he added, "You see how I want to deal with them: it is not enough to illustrate them—that is such poor work: I want to add to them or wring their secret from them".[5]
Publication
editOn his death, Burne-Jones left the album of flower paintings to his wife Georgiana, and she published a facsimile edition of 300 copies in 1905 in co-operation with the Fine Art Society in London. It was printed by Henri Piazza, who hand-stencilled watercolour over collotypes using the pochoir technique to produce brilliant colours. These copies of the "Book" were sold in both bound and unbound form, with the unbound copies contained in a clamshell box.[6][2]
Copies of The Flower Book are in the collections of the Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery and the Delaware Art Museum.[7][8] The art publisher Taschen reprinted the book in 1994 in a modern format without using the pochoir technique.
The British Museum bought the original album of paintings from Georgiana Burne-Jones in 1909.[9][10]
Prints
editFor the complete set of prints see The Flower Book by Edward Burne-Jones on Wikimedia Commons.
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ a b Leicester Galleries
- ^ a b c Wildman (1998), pp. 285–86
- ^ Burne-Jones (1906), p. 118
- ^ Burne-Jones (1906), p. 119
- ^ Burne-Jones (1906), p. 120
- ^ Art Knowledge News The Delaware Art Museum Features Edward Burne-Jones "Flower Book Illustrations"
- ^ Rose of Heaven, all 38 images can be viewed in a small format by searching the site for "Burne-Jones" and "Flower Book". Retrieved 1 February 2012.
- ^ Delaware Art Museum Archived 14 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine A Secret Book of Designs: The Burne-Jones Flower Book. Retrieved 1 February 2012.
- ^ Gere (1994), p. 98
- ^ Edward Burne-Jones, Love in a tangle, a watercolour, British Museum. Retrieved 1 February 2012.
References
edit- Burne-Jones, Georgiana (1906). Memorials of Edward Burne-Jones. Vol. 1. Macmillan. Retrieved 1 February 2012.
- Gere, J. A. (1994). Pre-Raphaelite drawings in the British Museum. London: British Museum Press. ISBN 0-7141-2603-9.
- Wildman, Stephen (1998). Edward Burne-Jones, Victorian artist-dreamer. Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 0-87099-859-5.
External links
edit- The Flower Book Edward Burne Jones, YouTube video, 3:05, showing all 38 watercolours.