Edward Burne-Jones
By (Author) Penelope Fitzgerald
Introduction by Frances Spalding
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
21st July 2014
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
History of art
Individual artists, art monographs
Paintings and painting
759.2
Paperback
336
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 25mm
320g
Penelope Fitzgerald, the Booker Prize-winning author of Offshore and The Blue Flower, turns her attention to the remarkable life of the Pre-Raphaelite artist Edward Burne-Jones.
I mean by a picture a beautiful, romantic dream of something that never was, never will be, in a light better than any light that ever shone in a land no one can define or remember, only desire Edward Burne-Jones
Edward Burne-Jones (1833-1898) was the prototypical pre-Raphaelite but with a truly individual sensibility. Penelope Fitzgeralds delightful biography charts his life from humble beginnings in Birmingham as the son of an unsuccessful framer, through a transformative period at Oxford, where he met his close friend and collaborator William Morris, and on to the apprenticeship with Dante Gabriel Rossetti that would shape his artistic vision.
His work harks back to an Arthurian England an Arcadia that offered solace against the onset of the Industrial Revolution, and on a deeply personal level provided respite from his ever-present melancholia. This is an illuminating portrait of a fascinating figure artistic genius, doting father, troubled husband written with all Penelope Fitzgeralds characteristic sympathy and insight.
Wise and ironic, funny and humane, Fitzgerald is a wonderful, wonderful writer. David Nicholls
Of all the novelists of the last quarter-century, she has the most unarguable claim on greatness. [It has been] a career we, as readers, can only count ourselves lucky to have lived through. Philip Hensher, Spectator
Penelope Fitzgerald was one of the most elegant and distinctive voices in British fiction. Three of her novels, The Bookshop, The Beginning of Spring and The Gate of Angels have been shortlisted for the Booker Prize. She won the Prize in 1979 for Offshore. Her last novel, The Blue Flower, was the most admired novel of 1995, chosen no fewer than nineteen times in the press as the 'Book of the Year'. It won America's National Book Critics' Circle Award. She died in April 2000, at the age of eighty-three.