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Frederick Sandys

Paintings

Frederick Sandys Painting - The Pearl by Frederick Sandys

The Pearl

Frederick Sandys Painting - Whitlingham Norfolk by Frederick Sandys

Whitlingham Norfolk

Frederick Sandys Painting - Loves Shadow by Frederick Sandys

Loves Shadow

Frederick Sandys Drawing - Iris by Frederick Sandys

Iris

Frederick Sandys Painting - Apple Blossom by Frederick Sandys

Apple Blossom

Study for Antigone

Study for Antigone

Grace Rose

Grace Rose

Gentle Spring

Gentle Spring

Love

Love

Mary Magdalene

Mary Magdalene

Portrait Of Anita Smith

Portrait Of Anita Smith

Portrait Of Cyril Flower, Lord Battersea

Portrait Of Cyril Flower, Lord Battersea

Portrait Of Josiah Caldwell

Portrait Of Josiah Caldwell

Queen Eleanor

Queen Eleanor

Drawings

Until her death

Until her death

King Pelles daughter carries the vessel of the Holy Grail

King Pelles daughter carries the vessel of the Holy Grail

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Sandys - Whitlingham Norfolk by Frederick Sandys

Whitlingham Norfolk

Anthony Frederick Augustus Sandys (born Antonio Frederic Augustus Sands) (Norwich 1 May 1829 – 25 June 1904), but usually known as Frederick Sandys, was an English Pre-Raphaelite painter, illustrator and draughtsman, of the Victorian era.[1]

Biography
Artistic studies

He was born in Norwich, and received his earliest lessons in art from his father, Anthony Sands, who was himself a painter.[1] His early studies show that he had a natural gift for careful and beautiful drawing. He was educated at Norwich School and later attended the Norwich School of Design in 1846.[2] In the same and next year his talent was recognized by the Royal Society of Arts.


Personal relationships

He married Georgiana Creed, but this marriage only lasted three years, although they never divorced. He had a long affair with the Romany woman Keomi Gray, who sat as a model both for him and Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and perhaps also for Simeon Solomon.[3][4] He and Gray had two daughters and two sons.[5]

In 1862 Sandys met actress Mary Emma Jones, known as Miss Clive, when she modeled for The Magdalen, now owned by the Norwich Castle Museum. A relationship developed between the two, he became devoted to her, taking her as his common-law wife for the rest of his life. She gave birth to a large number of children, 10 of whom were raised under the name of Neville and survived after Sandys' death. His work Proud Maisie made in 1867, was inspired by Mary, so much so that he made at least 11 versions by 1904.[6] He influenced his younger sister Emma Sandys (1843–1877), whose works were mainly portraits of children and of young women, often in period or medieval clothing.

He died in the Kensington area of London in 1904.


Works
Early work

He displayed great skills as a draughtsman, achieving recognition with his print parodying John Everett Millais's Sir Isumbras at the Ford in 1857.[7] The caricaturist turned the horse of Sir Isumbras into a donkey labelled J. R., Oxon. (John Ruskin). Upon it were seated Millais himself, in the character of the knight, with Rossetti and William Holman Hunt as the two children, one before and one behind.[7] The caricature, produced using the new autographic lithographic, caused a lot of talk about who the artist might be and ultimately introduced Sandys to the London art community.[6]

Rossetti and Sandys became close friends, and from May 1866 to July 1867, Sandys lived with Rossetti in Cheyne Walk, Chelsea. Sandys’s works were profoundly influenced by those of Rossetti. He focused mainly on mythological subjects and portraits.[6]

The Nightmare, 1857

Drawings and illustration

Engravings
Some of the first introductions to Pre-Raphaelite teachings emerged in magazines, such as Once a Week, the Cornhill Magazine, Good Words and Sunday Magazine.[8] Sandys began drawing in the 1860s for Once a Week, the Cornhill Magazine, Good Words and other periodicals, his work influenced by Albrecht Dürer, Ambrosius Holbein, and Alfred Rethel. Sandys made a total of 26 between 1859 and 1866, but each was a fine representation of this genre, faithfully engraved by professional wood-engravers, including the Dalziel brothers and Joseph Swain, that they are worthy of the collector's portfolio.[6] For the engravers to be successful in carving the intricate illustrations onto wood, they needed to start with a detailed, clear print from the artist.[9] Sandys had an eye and talent for exacting detail, an intention to accurately reflect the subject, revealed in the quality of his works, equally impressive for its technical detail as for its imaginative point of view.[10]

Sandys' The Death of King Warwulf is an example of his ability to create drawings that translated well for the engravings. Swirling shapes of flames, the curve the boat, its sail and the king's clothes that surround him create a feeling of movement. The focal point is the king's bowed head.[9]

His last woodcut was on the subject of Danaë in the Brazen Chamber. It was engraved by Swain for Once A Week but suppressed by the publication's editor, despite Sandys having the support of the magazine's publishers, on the grounds that it was too sensuous.[11]

He drew only in the magazines. No books illustrated by him can be traced. So his exquisite draughtsmanship has to be sought for in the old bound-up periodical volumes which are now hunted by collectors, or in publications such as Dalziels' Bible Gallery and the Cornhill Gallery and books of drawings, with verses attached to them, made to lie upon the drawing-room tables of those who had for the most part no idea of their merits.

The Death of King Warwulf, 1862

Danaë in the Brazen Chamber, wood engraving, signed by Swain, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

The Advent of Winter

Chalk drawings of lettered men
He made a number of chalk drawings of famous men of letters, including Tennyson, Browning, Matthew Arnold, and James Russell Lowell.

Studies for paintings
Study for Vivien depicts Sandy's lover, Keomi Gray, as Vivien of Tennyson's poem Idylls of the King. In the poem Vivien is the femme fatale in the story of King Arthur who used her looks to seduce Merlin to learn his secrets. Sandys had previously used tales from King Arthur as inspiration for his work, such as King Pelles' Daughter. He was drawn to stories of women who "seduce, entrap and destroy men, such as Helen of Troy, Morgan Le Fay and Medea." Sandys portrays Vivien as a beautiful, self-assured woman. The apple placed in front of her may refer to the story of Adam and Eve.[12]

Study for Autumn, made in 1860, is one of the many studies Sandys made before painting Autumn and provides evidence of Sandys' skill as a draughtsman. He captures minute details, such as the soldier's uniform and the plants and flowers. The study is much like the finished painting, except that the ginger jar is in the foreground.[13]

Study for Vivien, black and red chalk, Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery


Paintings
Grace Rose, 1866, Yale Center for British Art

Early in the 1860s he began to exhibit the paintings which set the seal upon his fame. The best known of these are Vivien (1863), Morgan le Fay (1864), Cassandra and Medea (1868).

Sandys never became a popular painter. He painted little, and the dominant influence upon his art was the influence exercised by lofty conceptions of tragic power. There was in it a sombre intensity and an almost stern beauty which lifted it far above the ideals of the crowd. The Scandinavian Sagas and Le Morte d'Arthur gave him subjects after his own heart. The Valkyrie and Morgan le Fay represent his work at its very best.

See also

Emma Sandys - painter, his sister
List of Pre-Raphaelite paintings – including the work of Anthony Frederick Augustus Sandys.

References

"Sandys' Life and Times: Early Years". Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery. Retrieved 14 June 2011.
Betty Elzea, ‘Sandys, (Anthony) Frederick Augustus (1829–1904)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 2 Oct 2013
"'The Beloved' 1865-6, by Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828–1882)". National Museums Liverpool. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
Prettejohn, Elizabeth (2008). "Solomon, Swinburne, Sappho". Victorian Review (Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada) 34: 108. Retrieved 2011-06-15.
"The Grays of Sir Alfred Munnings' Autobiography". Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society: 154. 1953. Retrieved 2011-06-15.
Elzea, Betty (2004). "(Anthony) Frederick Augustus Sandys". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press). Retrieved 15 June 2011. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
"Sandys and the Pre-Raphelites: A Nightmare". Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery. Retrieved 14 June 2011.
Harper, Charles George (1892). English Pen Artists of To-day. New York: MacMillon and Company. p. 72.
"The Greatest of Living Draughtsmen: Drawing Stories". Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery. Retrieved 14 June 2011.
Harper, Charles George (1892). English Pen Artists of To-day. New York: MacMillon and Company. p. 92.
Layard, George Somes (1907). "Cancelled Designs for Punch and Once A Week". Suppressed Plates, Wood Engravings &c. London: Adam & Charles Black. pp. 127–148. Retrieved 2011-06-15.
"Frederick Sandys: Study for Vivien". Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery. Retrieved 14 June 2011.

"Frederick Sandys: Study for Autumn". Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery. Retrieved 15 June 2011.

Further reading

Elzea, Betty (2001). Frederick Sandys 1829–1904: A Catalogue Raisonne. Antique Collectors Club. ISBN 978-1-85149-397-5.
Bate, Percy (November 1904). "The Late Frederick Sandys: A Retrospect". The International Studio (New York: John Lane & Son) 24 (93): 3–17. Retrieved 2011-06-15.
White, Gleeson (2009). English Illustration: 'The Sixties' 1855–1870. Echo Library. ISBN 978-1-84830-190-0.

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