The Garden in Art History: Pre-Raphaelites In the Garden
film
Convent Thoughts by Charles Allston Collins (C) Ashmoleanwa 1894
The Garden in Art History: Pre-Raphaelites In the Garden
Gardens have a special place in art history, they are a constant source of inspiration to artists and have continually been explored as an aesthetic and symbolic motif by art historians.
What draws Pre-Raphaelite artists and writers to enclosed gardens? Find out with Dr Dinah Roe, who takes us on a tour of garden pictures and poems by Charles Collins, Christina Rossetti, and William Morris, among others. We explore to what extent these walled spaces are liberating or confining, natural or artificial, finite or infinite, and think about what causes this nineteenth-century shift towards interiority in both gardens and their representation.