The Pre-Raphaelites' Love for Nature and Beauty

The Pre-Raphaelites were a group of 19th century British artists and poets who called themselves “The Brotherhood.” Dante Gabriel Rossetti, John Everett Millais, William Holman Hunt, William Morris, Edward Burne-Jones, Evelyn De Morgan, Elizabeth Siddal, and Marie Spartali Stillman captured the beauty of nature and the human form in their paintings. Influenced by Italian Renaissance painters, who also loved nature and ancient art, these optimistic Pre-Raphaelite painters transmitted in art a message of artistic renewal and moral reform, chastising academic artists in a political climate marked by industrialization and social decadence. The Pre-Raphaelite painters cultivated an art characterized by a rich palette of vivid colors, bright lighting effects, and complex spatial relationships. The subject matter contained moralizing and didactic meanings, visualized with historical, narrative, and legendary episodes based on mythological themes, Medieval sagas, and British historical events.

Class Recordings:

Class 1 - Feb. 9, 2023

Class 2 - Feb. 16, 2023

Class 3 - Feb. 23, 2023

Class 4 - March 2, 2023

Class 5 - March 16, 2023

Class 6 - March 23, 2023


Group Leader: LIANA CHENEY
Venue: online
Meets on: Thursdays 3:30 to 5:30 pm
Starting: 2/9/2023
Sessions: 6
Class Size: 50
Teaching Style: Lecture and discussion
Weekly Preparation: None
Group Leader Biography:

Liana De Girolami Cheney, PhD, is Professor of Art History emerita from UMASS Lowell and a winner of the Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement Award. Prof. Cheney is a Renaissance, Mannerist, and Pre-Raphaelite scholar, and author and coauthor of numerous articles and books including, Pre-Raphaelitism and Medievalism in the Arts (1993); Edward Burne-Jones’ Mythical Paintings (2013); Evelyn de Morgan’s Ariadne at Naxos (2020); and Edward Burne-Jones’s On Nature (2021).