Prudery and Piano Legs: The Victorian Nude

Fun and informative online lecture by Stella Grace Lyons looking at the role of the nude in Victorian art. 

This was the first of Stella’s online lectures I had done, and I was impressed by the quality of it. It was delivered via Zoom which worked well. She had good slides and I loved the fact that they were all labelled which helped when taking notes.

She started by talking about William Etty who specialised in nudes in the early Victorian period, an artist I know well as he was based in York where I studies and the gallery there has lots of work by him. He was heavily criticised the time as he painted realistic very human figures.

Later in the century the fashion was for nudes in classical settings with pale skin, so they looked like statues. They tended be blemish free and perfect. These were seen as more acceptable. There were some great illustrations of work by Lord Leighton and Lawrence Alma-Tadema. She also looked at the genres of fairy pictures and paintings of femme fatales.


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