- Arundel Society
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The Arundel Society was founded at London in 1849 and named after the Earl of Arundel, the famous collector of the Arundel Marbles and one of the first great English patrons and lovers of the arts. The society was originally the idea of the lawyer Belenden Ker and was founded at a meeting in the house of the famous painter Charles Eastlake, attended by Eastlake, Ker, Giovanni Aubrey Bezzi, and Edmund Oldfield. The society's purpose was to promote knowledge of the art works of the old Italian, Flemish, and other European masters.[1][2][3] Much of the work of the society consisted of publishing chromolithographs of Italian art works, especially fresco paintings, of earlier centuries and raising public awareness for the preservation of these works.[4] One of the people most responsible for furthering the goals of the society was Henry Layard, who joined in 1852. Some of the other important early members were John Ruskin, Charles Thomas Newton, and Henry Liddell.[5] Members of the Society's Council in 1877 included Frederick William Burton, Lord Elcho (Francis Charteris), Edward Poynter, George Edmund Street, Philip Charles Hardwick, George Richmond, and the architect John Norton.[6] The society was discontinued in 1897.
- Arundel Club. A society founded at London in 1904 for the purpose of continuing more effectively the work of the Arundel Society, which had encouraged the study of art by reproducing the best works of the old masters. The Arundel Club went further by copying and publishing important works in private collections previously inaccessible.
References
- ^ Gregory. W. H. (April 1884). "The Arundel Society". The Nineteenth Century: 610–625. http://books.google.com/books?id=dL8CAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA610.
- ^ Barlow, Henry Clark (1870). "Aubrey Bezzi was a music master in Plymouth and became Eastlake's assistant secretary in the Royal Commission of Fine Arts". On the Vernon Dante. London: Williams and Norgate. pp. 36–37. http://books.google.com/books?id=sSooYblX3xEC&pg=PA36.
- ^ Cook, E. T.; Wedderburn, Alexander, eds. (1908). "Edmund Oldfield (1817-1902), M.A., F.S.A., was assistant keeper of antiquities at the British Museum and at one time private secretary to Layard at the Office of Works". The Complete Works of John Ruskin. Library Edition, Vol. XXXV; Praeterita and Dilecta. London: George Allen. p. 384. http://books.google.com/books?id=2GxAAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA384.
- ^ "The fresco-paintings of Italy—the Arundel Society". Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine LXXXVIII (DXL): 458–471. Oct. 1860. http://books.google.com/books?id=kLMCAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA458.
- ^ Cook, E. T.; Wedderburn, Alexander, eds. (1903). The Complete Works of John Ruskin. Library Edition, Vol. IV; Modern Painters, Vol. II. London: George Allen. p. xliv.
- ^ A List of Members of the Society, Corrected to September, 1877. London: Arundel Society for Promoting the Knowledge of Art. 1877. http://books.google.com/books?id=wmBIAAAAYAAJ.
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.
Categories:- Art stubs
- Arts organisations based in the United Kingdom
- 1849 establishments in England
- 1897 disestablishments
- Organisations based in London
- Organizations established in 1849
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