
The Garden of Pan
Edward Burne-Jones·1886
Historical Context
Painted in 1886, The Garden of Pan is a work by Edward Burne-Jones, now in the collection of National Gallery of Victoria, that reflects the artistic concerns of the late 19th century — an era of fundamental transformation in both the methods and purposes of European and American painting. Edward Burne-Jones was the finest painter of the second generation of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, transforming Rossetti's romantic medievalism into a sustained aesthetic vision of rare coherence and beauty. His paintings and designs — for tapestries, stained glass.
Technical Analysis
Burne-Jones painted with smooth, enamel-like precision on fine-grained canvases, building his medieval dreamscapes in carefully modeled glazes. His palette is characteristic — muted roses, cool blues and greens, pale golds — recalling medieval tapestries and stained glass.


 - Frieze of Eight Women Gathering Apples - N05119 - National Gallery.jpg&width=600)
 - Psyche, Holding the Lamp, Gazes at Cupid (Palace Green Murals) - 1922P191 - Birmingham Museums Trust.jpg&width=600)



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