Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level F , Case X, Shelf 610, Box A

Jane Morris in the garden of Tudor House

Photograph
08/07/1865 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Jane Burden, the daughter of an Oxford ostler, married William Morris in 1859. Her large features did not fit the mid-Victorian ideal of beauty, but her long neck, full lips and rippling hair became synonymous with a type of beauty created by Rossetti and his circle. This photograph shows her in the artistic dress that she adopted after her marriage. It is one of a number for which she modelled in poses set by Rossetti in his garden in Chelsea. At the time they were beginning a romantic liaison, which was to last until 1875. The photograph formed the basis of the composition Pandora, which was executed in chalks in 1869. This is now in the Faringdon Collection at Buscot Park in Berkshire.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleJane Morris in the garden of Tudor House (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Albumen print from wet collodion-on-glass negative
Brief description
Photograph of Jane Morris in the garden of Tudor House by John Parsons, posed by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 08/07/1865.
Physical description
Photograph
Dimensions
  • Photograph height: 198mm
  • Photograph width: 147mm
  • Album closed height: 335mm
  • Album closed width: 260mm
  • Album closed depth: 55mm
Style
Object history
Dr Robert Steele presented to the V&A (in 1939) the album bound in Morris fabric and containing the original 19th century albumen prints, then (in 1942) the modern prints made from the original negatives, which then belonged to the granddaughter of William Michael Rossetti.
Subject depicted
Place depicted
Summary
Jane Burden, the daughter of an Oxford ostler, married William Morris in 1859. Her large features did not fit the mid-Victorian ideal of beauty, but her long neck, full lips and rippling hair became synonymous with a type of beauty created by Rossetti and his circle. This photograph shows her in the artistic dress that she adopted after her marriage. It is one of a number for which she modelled in poses set by Rossetti in his garden in Chelsea. At the time they were beginning a romantic liaison, which was to last until 1875. The photograph formed the basis of the composition Pandora, which was executed in chalks in 1869. This is now in the Faringdon Collection at Buscot Park in Berkshire.
Associated object
822-1942 (Copy)
Bibliographic reference
Fagence Cooper, Suzanne, Pre Raphaelite Art in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, V&A Publications, 2003. 176p., ill. ISBN I 85177 393 2
Collection
Accession number
1740-1939

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Record createdJanuary 8, 2004
Record URL
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