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Evelyn De Morgan

Evelyn De Morgan (30 August 1855 – 2 May 1919) was an English painter associated early in her career with the later phase of the Pre-Raphaelite Movement, and working in a range of styles including Aestheticism and Symbolism.[1] Her paintings are figural, foregrounding the female body through the use of spiritual, mythological, and allegorical themes. They rely on a range of metaphors (such as light and darkness, transformation, and bondage) to express what several scholars have identified as spiritualist and feminist content.[2][3][4][5] Her later works also dealt with the themes of war from a pacifist perspective, engaging with conflicts such as the Second Boer War and World War I.[2]

Evelyn De Morgan
Evelyn De Morgan
Born
Mary Evelyn Pickering

(1855-08-30)30 August 1855
London, England
Died2 May 1919(1919-05-02) (aged 63)
London, England
Resting placeBrookwood Cemetery
NationalityEnglish
EducationSlade School of Art
Known forpainting
Notable work
StylePre-Raphaelite, Symbolist
MovementPre-Raphaelites
SpouseWilliam De Morgan

Early life edit

She was born Mary Evelyn Pickering[1] at 6 Grosvenor Street[3] in London, England, to Percival Pickering QC, the Recorder of Pontefract, and Anna Maria Wilhelmina Spencer Stanhope, the sister of the artist John Roddam Spencer Stanhope and a descendant of Coke of Norfolk who was an Earl of Leicester.[2]

De Morgan was educated at home; according to her sister and biographer, Anna Wilhelmina Stirling, their mother insisted that "from the first Evelyn [was to] profi[t] from the same instruction as her brother." [6] She studied Greek, Latin, French, German, and Italian, as well as classical literature and mythology, and was also exposed at a young age to history books and scientific texts.[6]

Personal life edit

 
Evelyn and William De Morgan

In August 1883, Evelyn met the ceramicist William De Morgan (the son of the mathematician Augustus De Morgan), and on 5 March 1887, they married.[3] They spent their lives together in London, visiting Florence for half the year every year from 1895 until the outbreak of WWI in 1914.[2] Evelyn De Morgan supported the suffrage movement, and she appears as a signatory on the Declaration in Favour of Women's Suffrage of 1889.[4] She was also a pacifist and expressed her horror about the First World War and Boer War in over fifteen war paintings including The Red Cross and S.O.S.[1] In 1916, she held a benefit exhibition of these works at her studio in Edith Grove in support of the Red Cross and Italian Croce Rossa.[2]

For the first half of their marriage, De Morgan used the profits from sales of her work to help financially support her husband's pottery business; she also actively contributed ideas to his ceramics designs.[1] The De Morgans finally achieved financial security in 1906 after the publication of William's first novel, Joseph Vance.[2]

 
Our Lady of Peace, 1907

De Morgan and her husband were both spiritualists, and De Morgan’s sister and biographer A. M. W. Stirling credits them as the anonymous authors of a 1909 publication of automatic writings — communications with spirit beings — titled The Result of an Experiment.[7] The introduction to this book describes the couple as practicing automatic writing together every night for many years of their marriage.[8] Since precious little primary material in Evelyn De Morgan’s own hand has survived,[9] this text provides important information about her faith and her approach to a range of issues—from her understanding of ultimate reality to her belief about the role of art in capturing spirit. From the moment that de Morgan encountered spiritualism, her perspective seemed to change, and her works started to reflect more ideas about darkness and death.[5][10] De Morgan used a range of motifs to represent spiritual ideas. A few examples are Renaissance angels, heavenly auras, a distinctive contrast between light and dark, and the symbolic use of colours. De Morgan used complex allegories to depict her social commentary and spiritual beliefs. The iconography in these works reflect several spiritual themes such as the progress of the spirit, the materialism of life on earth, and the imprisonment of the soul in the earthly body.[2]  

Evelyn De Morgan died on 2 May 1919 in London, two years after the death of her husband and was buried in Brookwood Cemetery near Woking, Surrey.[2] Their tombstone bears an inscription from The Result of an Experiment: “Sorrow is only of the flesh / The life of the spirit is joy”.

Career edit

 
Evelyn De Morgan, Flora (1894)

De Morgan started drawing lessons when she was 15, and from the outset was dedicated to her craft. On the morning of her seventeenth birthday, she wrote in her diary: "Art is eternal, but life is short…" — "I will make up for it now, I have not a moment to lose."[3] This diary, given up after a few months, reveals her devotion to her work. She records hours upon hours of "steady work," chastising herself for "wast[ing] time" through daily tasks like going to tea and changing her dress.[6] According to Stirling, De Morgan was interested in little other than painting and fought hard to be considered seriously as an artist. She rebelled against any efforts to turn her into an "idle" woman, and when her mother suggested she be presented to society, De Morgan rejoined: "I'll go to the Drawing Room if you like...but if I go, I'll kick the Queen!"[6] Stirling recounts another incident in which De Morgan rejected further attempts to introduce her to society: "It was...suggested to Evelyn that she might like to go into Society and see a little of the world, but she jumped to a conclusion respecting this process which was clearly unjustifiable in her case. 'No one shall drag me out with a halter round my neck to sell me!' was her uncompromising rejoinder."[6]

In 1872, she was enrolled at the South Kensington National Art Training School (today the Royal College of Art) and in 1873 moved to the Slade School of Art.[2] At Slade, she was awarded the prestigious Slade Scholarship and won several awards: the Prize and Silver Medal for Painting from the Antique; First Certificate for Drawing from the Antique; and Third Equal Certificate for Composition.[2] She eventually left Slade to work more independently.[6]

De Morgan was known to George Frederic Watts from infancy, and while developing as an artist she would often visit him at his studio-home, Little Holland House.[6][4] She also studied under Watts's student, her uncle John Roddam Spencer Stanhope, who had a great influence on her visual style. Beginning in 1875, Evelyn often visited him in Florence where he lived. This enabled her to study the great artists of the Renaissance; the influence of Quattrocento artists like Botticelli is especially visible in her works from this point onwards.[2] After this period, De Morgan's art began to move away from the more traditional, classical subjects and style favoured by the Slade School towards a development of her own particular, mature style.[2][3] Through Stanhope, De Morgan also developed friendships with Pre-Raphaelite painters Dante Gabriel Rossetti and William Holman Hunt.[11] She was also friendly with other key figures in the Victorian literary and artistic world, like writer Vernon Lee.[11]

 
The Salutation, (The Visitation) 1883-4

De Morgan first exhibited in 1876 at the Dudley Gallery and then a year later at the inaugural Grosvenor Gallery exhibition in London.[3] She exhibited regularly until 1907, including a one-woman show at Wolverhampton Municipal Art Gallery and Museum in which 25 works were shown, including 14 for sale.[2] After 1907, she stopped exhibiting regularly. E.L. Smith theorises that this was due to the financial security that came from the success of her husband's first novel, meaning she was no longer obligated to sell her paintings.[2]

The vast majority of De Morgan’s works, particularly from the mid-1880s onwards, depict content or themes that can be described as broadly spiritualist.[2] These themes arguably reach their peak in her later works like Daughters of the Mist (c. 1905–10), which use a Symbolist allegorical register to suggest their profoundly mystical content by suggestion rather than explicit declaration.

Works edit

 
Queen Eleanor and Fair Rosamund
 
Night and Sleep (1878)
 
The Storm Spirits, c. 1900, the De Morgan Collection
 
The Love Potion, 1903

In August 1875, De Morgan sold her first work Tobias and the Angel. Her first exhibited painting, St Catherine of Alexandria, was shown at the Dudley Gallery in 1876.

In October 1991, sixteen canvases were destroyed in a fire at Bourlet's warehouse.

 
Aurora Triumphans, c. 1886
  • The Angel with the Serpent (1870s)
  • Tobias and the Angel (1875)
  • Cadmus and Harmonia (1877)
  • Ariadne at Naxos (1877)
  • Aurora Triumphans (1877–1878[12] or c. 1886[2]), Russell-Cotes Museum, Bournemouth
  • Night and Sleep (1878)
  • Goddess of Blossoms & Flowers (1880)
  • The Cristian Martyr (1880)
  • The Grey Sisters (1880–1881)
  • Phosphorus and Hesperus (1882)
  • By the Waters of Babylon (1882–1883)
  • Sleep and Death, the Children of the Night (1883)
  • Salutation or The Visitation (1883),
  • Love's Passing (1883–1884)
  • Dryad (1884–1885)
  • Luna (1885)
  • The Sea Maidens (1885–1886)
  • Hope in a Prison of Despair (1887)
  • The Soul's Prison House (1888)
  • Love, the Misleader (1889), private collection
  • The Soul’s Prison House (1889)
  • Medea (1889), Williamson Art Gallery, Birkenhead
  • Angel of Death (1890), private collection
  • The Garden of Opportunity (1892)
  • Gloria in Excelsis (1893)
  • Life and Thought Emerging from the Tomb (1893), Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool
  • Flora (1894)
  • Eos (1895), Columbia Museum of Art, Columbia, South Carolina
  • The Undiscovered Country, Columbia Museum of Art, Columbia, South Carolina
  • Lux in Tenebris (1895)
  • Boreas and Oreithyia (1896)
  • Earthbound (1897)
  • Angel of Death (1897), private collection
  • Helen of Troy (1898)
  • Cassandra (1898)
  • The Valley of Shadows (1899)
  • The Storm Spirits (1900)
  • The Poor Man who Saved the City (1901)
  • A Soul in Hell (1902)
  • The Love Potion (1903)
  • The Cadence of Autumn (1905)
  • Queen Eleanor & Fair Rosamund (1905)
  • Death of a Butterfly (c. 1905–1910)
  • Demeter Mourning for Persephone (1906)
  • Port after Stormy Seas (1905)
  • The Hour-Glass (1905)
  • Sleeping Earth and Walking Moon (1905-1910)
  • The Prisoner (1907)
  • Our Lady of Peace (1907)
  • The Worship of Mammon (1909)
  • Daughters of the Mist (c.1910)
  • Death of the Dragon (1914-1918)
  • The Vision (1914), private collection
  • S.O.S ( 1914 - 1916)
  • The Mourners (ca. 1915)
  • The Field of the Slain
  • Moonbeams Dipping into the Sea (1918)
  • The Red Cross (1918)
  • The Gilded Cage (1919)
  • Deianera (unknown)
  • The Kingdom of Heaven Suffereth Violence

Paintings edit

Collections edit

Her works are held in Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool; National Trust properties Wightwick Manor and Knightshayes Court; Russell-Cotes Art Gallery and Museum, National Portrait Gallery; Southwark Art Collection.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Evelyn De Morgan". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/45491. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Lawton Smith, Elise (2002). Evelyn Pickering De Morgan and the Allegorical Body. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. ISBN 978-0-8386-3883-5.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Gordon, Catherine (1996). Evelyn de Morgan: Oil Paintings. De Morgan Foundation. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-9528141-0-8.
  4. ^ a b c Rose, Lucy Ella (2017). Suffragist Artists in Partnership: Gender, Word and Image. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-1-4744214-5-4.
  5. ^ a b Merkling, Emma (10 July 2023). "Physics, Psychical Research, and the Self: Evelyn De Morgan's Spiritualist Portraits". Art History. doi:10.1111/1467-8365.12726. ISSN 0141-6790.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Stirling, Anna Wilhelmina (1922). William De Morgan and His Wife. Henry Holt and Company. p. 144.
  7. ^ Stirling, A. M. W. (1956). The Merry Wives of Battersea and the Gossip of Three Centuries, etc. London: Robert Hale. pp. 149–50.
  8. ^ [De Morgan], [Evelyn and William] (1909). The Result of an Experiment. London: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent.
  9. ^ Merkling, Emma. "Evelyn De Morgan's Reading Lists: A Discovery in the Archives". De Morgan Collection. The De Morgan Foundation. Retrieved 8 October 2020.
  10. ^ "Evelyn de Morgan, Symbolism, Feminism and Mysticism". www.talismanfineart.com. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  11. ^ a b Drawmer, Lois Jane (2001). The Impact of Science and Spiritualism in the Works of Evelyn De Morgan, 1870-1919 (PhD Dissertation) (PhD). Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College. p. 31.
  12. ^ . Russell-cotes.bournemouth.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 1 November 2010. Retrieved 20 November 2010.

Further reading edit

  • Marsh, Jan; Nunn, Pamela Gerrish (1989). Women Artists and the Pre-Raphaelite Movement. Virago. ISBN 978-0-86068-065-9.
  • Marsh, Jan; Nunn, Pamela Gerrish (1997). Pre-Raphaelite women artists. Manchester City Art Galleries. p. 139. ISBN 978-0-901673-55-8.

External links edit

  Media related to Evelyn de Morgan at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official website
  • "Evelyn De Morgan" at The Bridgeman Art Library
  • Portraits of (Mary) Evelyn De Morgan (née Pickering) at the National Portrait Gallery, London  
  • 8 artworks by or after Evelyn De Morgan at the Art UK site
  • Endless Digressions on Evelyn De Morgan by Kirsty Walker, Victorian Historian

evelyn, morgan, august, 1855, 1919, english, painter, associated, early, career, with, later, phase, raphaelite, movement, working, range, styles, including, aestheticism, symbolism, paintings, figural, foregrounding, female, body, through, spiritual, mytholog. Evelyn De Morgan 30 August 1855 2 May 1919 was an English painter associated early in her career with the later phase of the Pre Raphaelite Movement and working in a range of styles including Aestheticism and Symbolism 1 Her paintings are figural foregrounding the female body through the use of spiritual mythological and allegorical themes They rely on a range of metaphors such as light and darkness transformation and bondage to express what several scholars have identified as spiritualist and feminist content 2 3 4 5 Her later works also dealt with the themes of war from a pacifist perspective engaging with conflicts such as the Second Boer War and World War I 2 Evelyn De MorganEvelyn De MorganBornMary Evelyn Pickering 1855 08 30 30 August 1855London EnglandDied2 May 1919 1919 05 02 aged 63 London EnglandResting placeBrookwood CemeteryNationalityEnglishEducationSlade School of ArtKnown forpaintingNotable workNight and Sleep 1878 Aurora Triumphans 1886 Helen of Troy 1898 The Love Potion 1903 The Gilded Cage 1919 StylePre Raphaelite SymbolistMovementPre RaphaelitesSpouseWilliam De Morgan Contents 1 Early life 2 Personal life 3 Career 4 Works 5 Paintings 6 Collections 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life editShe was born Mary Evelyn Pickering 1 at 6 Grosvenor Street 3 in London England to Percival Pickering QC the Recorder of Pontefract and Anna Maria Wilhelmina Spencer Stanhope the sister of the artist John Roddam Spencer Stanhope and a descendant of Coke of Norfolk who was an Earl of Leicester 2 De Morgan was educated at home according to her sister and biographer Anna Wilhelmina Stirling their mother insisted that from the first Evelyn was to profi t from the same instruction as her brother 6 She studied Greek Latin French German and Italian as well as classical literature and mythology and was also exposed at a young age to history books and scientific texts 6 Personal life edit nbsp Evelyn and William De Morgan In August 1883 Evelyn met the ceramicist William De Morgan the son of the mathematician Augustus De Morgan and on 5 March 1887 they married 3 They spent their lives together in London visiting Florence for half the year every year from 1895 until the outbreak of WWI in 1914 2 Evelyn De Morgan supported the suffrage movement and she appears as a signatory on the Declaration in Favour of Women s Suffrage of 1889 4 She was also a pacifist and expressed her horror about the First World War and Boer War in over fifteen war paintings including The Red Cross and S O S 1 In 1916 she held a benefit exhibition of these works at her studio in Edith Grove in support of the Red Cross and Italian Croce Rossa 2 For the first half of their marriage De Morgan used the profits from sales of her work to help financially support her husband s pottery business she also actively contributed ideas to his ceramics designs 1 The De Morgans finally achieved financial security in 1906 after the publication of William s first novel Joseph Vance 2 nbsp Our Lady of Peace 1907 De Morgan and her husband were both spiritualists and De Morgan s sister and biographer A M W Stirling credits them as the anonymous authors of a 1909 publication of automatic writings communications with spirit beings titled The Result of an Experiment 7 The introduction to this book describes the couple as practicing automatic writing together every night for many years of their marriage 8 Since precious little primary material in Evelyn De Morgan s own hand has survived 9 this text provides important information about her faith and her approach to a range of issues from her understanding of ultimate reality to her belief about the role of art in capturing spirit From the moment that de Morgan encountered spiritualism her perspective seemed to change and her works started to reflect more ideas about darkness and death 5 10 De Morgan used a range of motifs to represent spiritual ideas A few examples are Renaissance angels heavenly auras a distinctive contrast between light and dark and the symbolic use of colours De Morgan used complex allegories to depict her social commentary and spiritual beliefs The iconography in these works reflect several spiritual themes such as the progress of the spirit the materialism of life on earth and the imprisonment of the soul in the earthly body 2 Evelyn De Morgan died on 2 May 1919 in London two years after the death of her husband and was buried in Brookwood Cemetery near Woking Surrey 2 Their tombstone bears an inscription from The Result of an Experiment Sorrow is only of the flesh The life of the spirit is joy Career edit nbsp Evelyn De Morgan Flora 1894 De Morgan started drawing lessons when she was 15 and from the outset was dedicated to her craft On the morning of her seventeenth birthday she wrote in her diary Art is eternal but life is short I will make up for it now I have not a moment to lose 3 This diary given up after a few months reveals her devotion to her work She records hours upon hours of steady work chastising herself for wast ing time through daily tasks like going to tea and changing her dress 6 According to Stirling De Morgan was interested in little other than painting and fought hard to be considered seriously as an artist She rebelled against any efforts to turn her into an idle woman and when her mother suggested she be presented to society De Morgan rejoined I ll go to the Drawing Room if you like but if I go I ll kick the Queen 6 Stirling recounts another incident in which De Morgan rejected further attempts to introduce her to society It was suggested to Evelyn that she might like to go into Society and see a little of the world but she jumped to a conclusion respecting this process which was clearly unjustifiable in her case No one shall drag me out with a halter round my neck to sell me was her uncompromising rejoinder 6 In 1872 she was enrolled at the South Kensington National Art Training School today the Royal College of Art and in 1873 moved to the Slade School of Art 2 At Slade she was awarded the prestigious Slade Scholarship and won several awards the Prize and Silver Medal for Painting from the Antique First Certificate for Drawing from the Antique and Third Equal Certificate for Composition 2 She eventually left Slade to work more independently 6 De Morgan was known to George Frederic Watts from infancy and while developing as an artist she would often visit him at his studio home Little Holland House 6 4 She also studied under Watts s student her uncle John Roddam Spencer Stanhope who had a great influence on her visual style Beginning in 1875 Evelyn often visited him in Florence where he lived This enabled her to study the great artists of the Renaissance the influence of Quattrocento artists like Botticelli is especially visible in her works from this point onwards 2 After this period De Morgan s art began to move away from the more traditional classical subjects and style favoured by the Slade School towards a development of her own particular mature style 2 3 Through Stanhope De Morgan also developed friendships with Pre Raphaelite painters Dante Gabriel Rossetti and William Holman Hunt 11 She was also friendly with other key figures in the Victorian literary and artistic world like writer Vernon Lee 11 nbsp The Salutation The Visitation 1883 4 De Morgan first exhibited in 1876 at the Dudley Gallery and then a year later at the inaugural Grosvenor Gallery exhibition in London 3 She exhibited regularly until 1907 including a one woman show at Wolverhampton Municipal Art Gallery and Museum in which 25 works were shown including 14 for sale 2 After 1907 she stopped exhibiting regularly E L Smith theorises that this was due to the financial security that came from the success of her husband s first novel meaning she was no longer obligated to sell her paintings 2 The vast majority of De Morgan s works particularly from the mid 1880s onwards depict content or themes that can be described as broadly spiritualist 2 These themes arguably reach their peak in her later works like Daughters of the Mist c 1905 10 which use a Symbolist allegorical register to suggest their profoundly mystical content by suggestion rather than explicit declaration Works edit nbsp Queen Eleanor and Fair Rosamund nbsp Night and Sleep 1878 nbsp The Storm Spirits c 1900 the De Morgan Collection nbsp The Love Potion 1903 In August 1875 De Morgan sold her first work Tobias and the Angel Her first exhibited painting St Catherine of Alexandria was shown at the Dudley Gallery in 1876 In October 1991 sixteen canvases were destroyed in a fire at Bourlet s warehouse nbsp Aurora Triumphans c 1886 The Angel with the Serpent 1870s Tobias and the Angel 1875 Cadmus and Harmonia 1877 Ariadne at Naxos 1877 Aurora Triumphans 1877 1878 12 or c 1886 2 Russell Cotes Museum Bournemouth Night and Sleep 1878 Goddess of Blossoms amp Flowers 1880 The Cristian Martyr 1880 The Grey Sisters 1880 1881 Phosphorus and Hesperus 1882 By the Waters of Babylon 1882 1883 Sleep and Death the Children of the Night 1883 Salutation or The Visitation 1883 Love s Passing 1883 1884 Dryad 1884 1885 Luna 1885 The Sea Maidens 1885 1886 Hope in a Prison of Despair 1887 The Soul s Prison House 1888 Love the Misleader 1889 private collection The Soul s Prison House 1889 Medea 1889 Williamson Art Gallery Birkenhead Angel of Death 1890 private collection The Garden of Opportunity 1892 Gloria in Excelsis 1893 Life and Thought Emerging from the Tomb 1893 Walker Art Gallery Liverpool Flora 1894 Eos 1895 Columbia Museum of Art Columbia South Carolina The Undiscovered Country Columbia Museum of Art Columbia South Carolina Lux in Tenebris 1895 Boreas and Oreithyia 1896 Earthbound 1897 Angel of Death 1897 private collection Helen of Troy 1898 Cassandra 1898 The Valley of Shadows 1899 The Storm Spirits 1900 The Poor Man who Saved the City 1901 A Soul in Hell 1902 The Love Potion 1903 The Cadence of Autumn 1905 Queen Eleanor amp Fair Rosamund 1905 Death of a Butterfly c 1905 1910 Demeter Mourning for Persephone 1906 Port after Stormy Seas 1905 The Hour Glass 1905 Sleeping Earth and Walking Moon 1905 1910 The Prisoner 1907 Our Lady of Peace 1907 The Worship of Mammon 1909 Daughters of the Mist c 1910 Death of the Dragon 1914 1918 The Vision 1914 private collection S O S 1914 1916 The Mourners ca 1915 The Field of the Slain Moonbeams Dipping into the Sea 1918 The Red Cross 1918 The Gilded Cage 1919 Deianera unknown The Kingdom of Heaven Suffereth ViolencePaintings edit nbsp The Crown of Glory nbsp Helen of Troy 1898 nbsp Cassandra nbsp Cadmus and Harmonia nbsp Eos 1895 nbsp Hero Holding the Beacon for Leander nbsp Clytie nbsp Hope in a Prison of Despair 1887 nbsp Painting The Worship of Mammon 1909 nbsp The Gilded Cage 1919 nbsp Dryad 1884 1885 nbsp The Red Cross 1918Collections editHer works are held in Walker Art Gallery Liverpool National Trust properties Wightwick Manor and Knightshayes Court Russell Cotes Art Gallery and Museum National Portrait Gallery Southwark Art Collection References edit a b c d Evelyn De Morgan Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 45491 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Lawton Smith Elise 2002 Evelyn Pickering De Morgan and the Allegorical Body Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 978 0 8386 3883 5 a b c d e f Gordon Catherine 1996 Evelyn de Morgan Oil Paintings De Morgan Foundation p 14 ISBN 978 0 9528141 0 8 a b c Rose Lucy Ella 2017 Suffragist Artists in Partnership Gender Word and Image Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 1 4744214 5 4 a b Merkling Emma 10 July 2023 Physics Psychical Research and the Self Evelyn De Morgan s Spiritualist Portraits Art History doi 10 1111 1467 8365 12726 ISSN 0141 6790 a b c d e f g Stirling Anna Wilhelmina 1922 William De Morgan and His Wife Henry Holt and Company p 144 Stirling A M W 1956 The Merry Wives of Battersea and the Gossip of Three Centuries etc London Robert Hale pp 149 50 De Morgan Evelyn and William 1909 The Result of an Experiment London Simpkin Marshall Hamilton Kent Merkling Emma Evelyn De Morgan s Reading Lists A Discovery in the Archives De Morgan Collection The De Morgan Foundation Retrieved 8 October 2020 Evelyn de Morgan Symbolism Feminism and Mysticism www talismanfineart com Retrieved 10 March 2021 a b Drawmer Lois Jane 2001 The Impact of Science and Spiritualism in the Works of Evelyn De Morgan 1870 1919 PhD Dissertation PhD Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College p 31 Aurora Triumphans 1877 8 oil painting by Evelyn de Morgan 1855 1919 returns to Bournemouth Russell cotes bournemouth gov uk Archived from the original on 1 November 2010 Retrieved 20 November 2010 Further reading editMarsh Jan Nunn Pamela Gerrish 1989 Women Artists and the Pre Raphaelite Movement Virago ISBN 978 0 86068 065 9 Marsh Jan Nunn Pamela Gerrish 1997 Pre Raphaelite women artists Manchester City Art Galleries p 139 ISBN 978 0 901673 55 8 External links edit nbsp Media related to Evelyn de Morgan at Wikimedia Commons Official website Evelyn De Morgan at The Bridgeman Art Library Grave of Evelyn and William De Morgan Portraits of Mary Evelyn De Morgan nee Pickering at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp 8 artworks by or after Evelyn De Morgan at the Art UK site Endless Digressions on Evelyn De Morgan by Kirsty Walker Victorian Historian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evelyn De Morgan amp oldid 1217921089, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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