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    pre-raphaelite

    Explore " pre-raphaelite" with insightful episodes like "Beneath the Blue", "Not Just a Pretty Face", "When Wombats Do Inspire", "1. Richard Redgrave - The sempstress" and "2. Daniel Maclise - Scene – lawn before the Duke’s palace; Orlando about to engage with Charles, the Duke’s wrestler 1854, background repainted" from podcasts like ""Museum Secrets", "Objects Out Loud", "Rime: Stories About Poetry", "Victorian visions" and "Victorian visions"" and more!

    Episodes (15)

    Beneath the Blue

    Beneath the Blue

    Lots of objects in the Ashmolean have got secrets hidden under their surface. Join the Ashmolean’s Conservation Research Fellow and colour detective Tea Ghigo, as she looks at a special bookcase with a suspicious shade of turquoise on it. Armed with an X-ray spectrometer and an infrared camera, she’s managed to find something strange lurking beneath the blue.

    When Tea looks at this bookcase, she sees a Venetian carnival and smells citrus fruits. What about you?

    The Great Bookcase – View it here

    If you want to take a closer look at the object in this episode, you can view it at the link above, or visit the podcast page on the Ashmolean website: ashmolean.org/museum-secrets

    Producer: Lucie Dawkins
    Presenters: Lucie Dawkins and Tea Ghigo

    Tea's research on the Great Bookcase is part of a European Research Council-funded project called Chromotope. Find out more.

    About Museum Secrets: Welcome to season 2 of Museum Secrets. Every week Lucie Dawkins will  take you behind the scenes at the University of Oxford's Ashmolean Museum. There are a million objects here in the Museum, each with its own hidden story. Come on in, as we track down the weird and wonderful among them, to give us a bitesized pick-me-up in these challenging times. Join us every week for a daily dose of cheer.

    Not Just a Pretty Face

    Not Just a Pretty Face

    Lizzie Siddall was the 19th century’s proto-supermodel. Her beauty inspired the artists and poets of her generation, who presented her as a mysterious, fairytale creature. We tend to know her through the filter of the men who painted her, but in the archives of the Ashmolean Museum, you can encounter the real Lizzie. Behind the silent muse of Pre-Raphaelite art was a vibrant, creative woman, who was herself a talented poet and artist. In this episode, meet one of history’s most famous models, on her own terms.

    Two men in a boat and a woman punting, Elizabeth Siddal (1829–1862) View this online

    Elizabeth Siddal playing a Stringed Instrument, by Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828–1882) View this online

    Elizabeth Siddal playing Double Pipes, by Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828–1882) View this online


    If you want to take a closer look at the artworks mentioned in this episode, you can view them at the links above. Visit the podcast page on the Ashmolean website: ashmolean.org/objects-out-loud

    Hosted by Lucie Dawkins, with Caroline Palmer and the voices of Josie Richardson and Sid Sagar. With poems by Lizzie Siddall, Christina Rossetti, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and Alfred Lord Tennyson.
    The producer is Lucie Dawkins.

    About Objects Out Loud: From a magician who inspired Shakespeare, and poems woven into Japanese prints, to manuscripts illuminated with the ancient love story of Layla and Majnun, this new podcast series will delve into the poetry and literature hidden in the collections at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford.

    When Wombats Do Inspire

    When Wombats Do Inspire

    Poet and painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti was obsessed with wombats, as were his siblings and the members of the Pre-Raphaelite movement he founded. Top, the wombat Rossetti acquired in 1869, became legendary in their circle, inspiring poems and drawings and myths that linger to this day. But as so often happens, there was a disconnect between the idea of a wombat and the real creature that all-too-briefly shared Rossetti’s home.

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