Burne-Jones Talking (His Conversations 1895-1898 Preserved by His Studio Assistant Thomas Rooke)
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Product Details
Author:
Edward Burne-Jones, Thomas Rooke, Mary Lago
Format:
Paperback
Pages:
212
Publisher:
Pallas Athene (January 1, 2013)
Language:
English
ISBN-13:
9781843680895
ISBN-10:
1843680890
Weight:
11.04oz
Dimensions:
5.276" x 8.268" x 1"
File:
Eloquence-SimonSchuster_04022026_P9912986_onix30_Complete-20260402.xml
Folder:
Eloquence
List Price:
$17.99
As low as:
$17.09
Publisher Identifier:
P-SS
Discount Code:
D
Audience:
General/trade
Case Pack:
24
Pub Discount:
65
Imprint:
Pallas Athene
Overview
• The conversations of Burne-Jones, 19th-century painter of melancholy, abstract angels, with his assistant, revealing a loveable, witty man, articulate about his world, craft and contemporaries
To know his work without his talk is "not to know him" ...only when they are side by side is the common origin and aim seen and the complete man displayed.' Thus Thomas Rooke, studio assistant to Burne-Jones, who over four years memorized and recorded much of his master's studio and lunch-table talk. The man revealed with startling freshness and immediacy is far from the familiar painter of knightly melancholy and abstract angels. Burne-Jones emerges as a loveable and charming man, far more practical and down-to-earth, far more witty and ironic than might have been expected. He may still regret that he was not born in the Middle Ages and reminisce about the golden years with William Morris and Dante Gabriel Rossetti in the 1850's and '60s. But he is still hard at work on his last great collaboration with Morris, the Kelmscott Chaucer, while not hesitating to fulminate about Britain's imperial pretensions and the hypocrisy that accompanied them. And he is unfailingly articulate when it comes to discussing the craft of painting in relation to himself, his contemporaries and the giants of the past. The conversations are edited by Mary Lago, Professor of English at the University of Missouri-Columbia.








