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Dante Gabriel Rossetti
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==Collections and critical assessment== [[File:16 Cheyne Walk 03.JPG|thumb|Blue plaque at 16 Cheyne Walk]] [[Tate Britain]], [[Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery|Birmingham]], [[Manchester Art Gallery|Manchester]], [[Salford Museum and Art Gallery|Salford]] Museum and Art Galleries and [[Wightwick Manor]] National Trust, all contain large collections of Rossetti's work; Salford was bequeathed a number of works following the death of [[L. S. Lowry]] in 1976. Lowry was president of the Newcastle-based 'Rossetti Society', which was founded in 1966.<ref>Rohde (2000). p. 396.</ref> Lowry's private collection of works was chiefly built around Rossetti's paintings and sketches of Elizabeth Siddal and Jane Morris, and notable pieces included ''Pandora'', '' Proserpine'' and a drawing of [[Annie Miller]]. In an interview with [[Mervyn Levy]], Lowry explained his fascination with the Rossetti women in relation to his own work: "I don't like his women at all, but they fascinate me, like a snake. That's why I always buy Rossetti whenever I can. His women are really rather horrible. It's like a friend of mine who says he hates my work, although it fascinates him."<ref name="Rohde p. 276">Rohde (2000), p. 276.</ref> The friend Lowry referred to was businessman Monty Bloom, to whom he also explained his obsession with Rossetti's portraits: "They are not real women.[...] They are dreams.[...] He used them for something in his mind caused by the death of his wife. I may be quite wrong there, but significantly they all came after the death of his wife."<ref name="Rohde p. 276" /> The popularity, frequent reproduction, and general availability of Rossetti's later paintings of women have led to this association with "a morbid and languorous sensuality".<ref name="Treuherz12">Treuherz et al. (2003), p. 12.</ref> His small-scale early works and drawings are less well known, but it is in these that his originality, technical inventiveness, and significance in the movement away from Academic tradition can best be seen.<ref name="Treuherz16">Treuherz et al. (2003), p. 16.</ref> As [[Roger Fry]] wrote in 1916, "Rossetti more than any other artist since [[William Blake|Blake]] may be hailed as a forerunner of the new ideas" in English Art.<ref name="Treuherz12rf">Quoted in Treuherz et al. (2003), p. 12.</ref>
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