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Scent And The Art Of The Pre-Raphaelites

Oct 11, 2024 - Jan 26, 2025
Scent is a key motif in paintings by the artists of the Pre-Raphaelite and Aesthetic movements. Fragrance is visually suggested in images of daydreaming figures smelling flowers or burning incense, enhancing the sensory aura of 鈥榓rt for art鈥檚 sake鈥. Scent was also implied in Victorian painting to evoke hedonism 鈥 pleasure in exquisite sensations 鈥 and a preoccupation with beauty; or to reflect the Victorian vogue for synaesthesia (evoking one sense through another) and the penchant for art, like scent, to evoke moods and emotions.

Motifs of scent and smell intersected with the most vociferous discourses of the day, including sanitation, urban morality, immigration, race, mental health, faith, and the rise in women鈥檚 independence. Many 19th- and early 20th-century notions about smell 鈥 that it is the manifestation of disease, that rainbows radiate the fragrance of dewy meadows, or that highly-perfumed flowers are asphyxiating 鈥 seem outlandish today.

Yet this exhibition demonstrates how an understanding of these and other largely forgotten ideas about smell bring to the fore significant aspects of these extraordinary artworks.

This landmark exhibition is curated by Dr Christina Bradstreet, author of Scented Visions: Smell in Art, 1850-1914 (PSU Press, 2022). It highlights the role of the olfactory sense and its significance for some of Britain鈥檚 best-loved art treasures. from collections across the United Kingdom. Artists featured include Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale, John Frederick Lewis, John Everett Millais, Evelyn De Morgan, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Simeon Solomon, and others.

Visitors to the exhibition will be able to participate in an optional scent experience that will enliven the scents suggested in certain paintings. A wide-ranging programme of events exploring art and scent will accompany the exhibition.



Scent is a key motif in paintings by the artists of the Pre-Raphaelite and Aesthetic movements. Fragrance is visually suggested in images of daydreaming figures smelling flowers or burning incense, enhancing the sensory aura of 鈥榓rt for art鈥檚 sake鈥. Scent was also implied in Victorian painting to evoke hedonism 鈥 pleasure in exquisite sensations 鈥 and a preoccupation with beauty; or to reflect the Victorian vogue for synaesthesia (evoking one sense through another) and the penchant for art, like scent, to evoke moods and emotions.

Motifs of scent and smell intersected with the most vociferous discourses of the day, including sanitation, urban morality, immigration, race, mental health, faith, and the rise in women鈥檚 independence. Many 19th- and early 20th-century notions about smell 鈥 that it is the manifestation of disease, that rainbows radiate the fragrance of dewy meadows, or that highly-perfumed flowers are asphyxiating 鈥 seem outlandish today.

Yet this exhibition demonstrates how an understanding of these and other largely forgotten ideas about smell bring to the fore significant aspects of these extraordinary artworks.

This landmark exhibition is curated by Dr Christina Bradstreet, author of Scented Visions: Smell in Art, 1850-1914 (PSU Press, 2022). It highlights the role of the olfactory sense and its significance for some of Britain鈥檚 best-loved art treasures. from collections across the United Kingdom. Artists featured include Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale, John Frederick Lewis, John Everett Millais, Evelyn De Morgan, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Simeon Solomon, and others.

Visitors to the exhibition will be able to participate in an optional scent experience that will enliven the scents suggested in certain paintings. A wide-ranging programme of events exploring art and scent will accompany the exhibition.



Contact details

Sunday
12:00 - 5:00 PM
Monday - Saturday
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
The University of Birmingham Edgebaston Birmingham, UK B15 2TS

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