Simeon Solomon (1840-1905)
Simeon Solomon (1840-1905)

A group of Franciscan friars

細節
Simeon Solomon (1840-1905)
A group of Franciscan friars
signed with initials and dated 'SS/1882' (lower right)
pencil and blue chalk on board
12 x 19 in. (30.5 x 48.3 cm.)
來源
with Maas Gallery, London.

拍品專文

Colin Cruise has suggested that the unusual subject matter of this sheet may have been inspired by Solomon's acquaintance with the community of Franciscan friars established in Notting Hill in the 1860s. Recognisable by their simple habits and knotted rope belts, the friars are depicted deep in prayer in an olive grove, one of the associations of their founder, St Francis of Assisi. Solomon, born a Jew, found from the 1860s onwards a deep-seated interest in Catholicism and its rituals.

Stylistically, the sheet demonstrates not only his interest in early Florentine painting, but also, in its technique and use of line, the work of William Blake, whose interest in a wide range of religions Solomon shared.

更多來自 維多利亞時代、前拉斐爾派及英國印象派藝術

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