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Arthur Hughes

1832–1915

Elaine with the Armour of Launcelot 1867
In Tate Britain

Historic and Modern British Art

In Tate Britain

Prints and Drawings Rooms

6 artworks by Arthur Hughes
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  • Artist biography
  • Wikipedia entry

Artist biography

Born in London, Hughes was educated at Archbishop Tenison's Grammar School, and entered the School of Design, Somerset House, London in 1846, studying under Alfred Stevens. In 1847 he won an art studentship at the Royal Academy Schools, exhibiting his first picture, Musidora, at the Academy two years later.

Although a Pre-Raphaelite sympathiser and intimate of their circle, Hughes was never a member of the group. He converted to Pre-Raphaelitism in 1850 after reading the Pre-Raphaelite magazine The Germ; in the same year he met William Holman Hunt, D.G. Rossetti and Ford Madox Brown. He exhibited his first Pre-Raphaelite painting, Ophelia (Manchester City Art Gallery), in 1852, and met Millais that year. He produced some of his best-known Pre-Raphaelite works during the 1850s, including April Love, 1855-6 (Tate Gallery N02476) and The Long Engagement, c.1854-9 (Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery). From about 1852 to 1858 he shared a studio with the sculptor Alexander Munro. He married Tryphena Foord in 1855, eventually having five children. In 1855 he also began a successful career as an illustrator, becoming associated particularly with the works of Thomas Hughes, George Macdonald and Christina Rossetti. He devoted much of the subsequent two decades to illustrating. He was one of the contributors to the Oxford Union decorations in 1857. He moved from London in 1858 and in 1862 made a short visit to Italy. He exhibited for the last time at the Royal Academy in 1908. He died at Kew, near London. A sale of his works took place at Christie's in 1921.

Retrospective exhibitions of Hughes's work were held by the Fine Arts Society in 1900, Rembrandt Galleries in 1904, Walker Galleries (memorial exhibition) in 1916, and the National Museum of Wales, Cardiff and Leighton House, London in 1971.

Further reading:
William Fredeman, The Penkill Letters of Arthur Hughes to William Bell Scott and Alice Boyd 1866-97, Manchester 1967Leonard Roberts, introduction by Stephen Wildman, Arthur Hughes: His Life and Works, a Catalogue Raisonné , Woodbridge, Suffolk [to be published 1997]

Terry Riggs
November 1997

Read more

Wikipedia entry

Arthur Hughes (27 January 1832 – 22 December 1915) was an English painter and illustrator associated with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.

This biography is from Wikipedia under an . Spotted a problem? Let us know.

Pre-Raphaelite

Artworks

Left Right
  • Old Sal for ‘At the Back of the North Wind’

    Arthur Hughes
    c.1869
    View by appointment
  • The Drunken Cabman for ‘At the Back of the North Wind’

    Arthur Hughes
    c.1870
    View by appointment
  • The Wicked Fairy for ‘At the Back of the North Wind’

    Arthur Hughes
    c.1870
    View by appointment
  • April Love

    Arthur Hughes
    1855–6
    On display at Tate Britain part of Historic and Modern British Art
  • The Eve of St Agnes

    Arthur Hughes
    1856
    On display at Tate Britain part of Historic and Modern British Art
  • That was a Piedmontese ...

    Arthur Hughes
    1862
  • Aurora Leigh’s Dismissal of Romney (‘The Tryst’)

    Arthur Hughes
    1860
  • The Woodman’s Child

    Arthur Hughes
    1860
See all 14

Artist as subject

  • Arthur Hughes at the Age of Four

    Samuel Lane
    c.1836

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