Nymphs and Satyr, by William Bouguereau (Detail)
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Sir Lawrence
Alma-Tadema
Netherlands Academic painter & draftsman

born 8 January 1836 - died 28 June 1912
Born in: Dronrijp (Friesland, Netherlands).
Died in: Wiesbaden (Darmstadt, Hesse, Germany).
Citizen of: Netherlands, England & Belgium.
Also known as:
Laurens Alma Tadema, Sir Laurence Alma-Tadema, Lawrence Alma- Tadema.
Student of:
Josephus Laurentius Dyckmans (1811-1888), Baron Jan August Hendrik Leys (1815-1869), Baron Gustave Wappers (1803-1874).
Teacher of:
Anna Alma-Tadema (1865-1943), Lady Laura Teresa Alma-Tadema (1852-1909), Arthur Drummond (1871-1957), Hendrik Willem Mesdag (1831-1915).
Father of:
Anna Alma-Tadema (1865-1943).
Husband of:
Lady Laura Teresa Alma-Tadema (1852-1909).
Cousin of:
Hendrik Willem Mesdag (1831-1915).

Associate member of:
Royal Academy of Art (from 1876).
Full member of:
Royal Academy of Art (from 1879); Royal Accademia Romana di San Luca (from 1907).
Officer of:
Légion d'Honneur (from 1878).
Honorary member of:
Oxford University Dramatic Society (from 1890).

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Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema
Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema
Image courtesy of Don Kurtz
  Biographical Information

"Lawrence Alma-Tadema was one of the most renowned painters of late nineteenth century Britain. Universally admired for his superb draftsmanship and 'real to life' depictions of Classical antiquity he was much sought after by Victorian collectors who intimately connected with his vision. He so embraced the aspirations of his day that when the idealistic illusions of his age were shattered by modernism and the Great War his art fell from favour. Now, again, as the re-evaluation of that era is well underway his reputation is rebounding. The study of the artist and his art must begin as always with their origins ..."

This is an extract from Vern G. Swanson's landmark biography on the great Victorian artist. Dr Swanson is an acknowledged expert on Alma-Tadema and has written a critically acclaimed catalogue raisonée on the artist.

With his kind permission, the Art Renewal Center has been allowed to reprint his entire Alma-Tadema biography. This is an internet first: the complete, unabridged biography of a great master, printed with footnotes and copious illustrations. Where possible, supplementary links have been included to references in the text made to artists or personalities not so well known to twenty-first century audiences. In many cases, nineteenth century artists referred to in the text are also represented on ARC, and links have been provided to their galleries.

Further Reading:
  • Read the reaction of Andy to ARC's Alma-Tadema galleries ...


  • More Images of the Artist
    Artist Letters
    click to enlarge

    Spring

    1894
    Oil on canvas
    70 1/2 x 31 3/8 inches (179.1 x 80 cm)
    J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, California, USA
    Added 1/21/2003


    Spring
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    A Coign of Vantage

    1895
    Oil on canvas
    17 1/2 x 25 1/8 inches (44.5 x 64 cm)
    Private collection
    Added 8/27/2001

    A Coign of Vantage
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    The Finding of Moses

    1904
    Oil on canvas
    54 1/8 x 84 inches (137.5 x 213.4 cm)
    Private collection
    Added 9/24/2001

    The Finding of Moses
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    The Finding of Moses [detail]

    1904
    Oil on canvas
    54 1/8 x 84 inches (137.5 x 213.4 cm)
    Private collection
    Added 1/21/2003

    The Finding of Moses [detail]
    Download: HI-RES image
     
    The Women of Amphissa

    1887
    Oil on canvas
    47 7/8 x 71 7/8 inches (121.8 x 182.8 cm)
    Private collection
    Added 9/24/2001

    The Women of Amphissa
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    The Roses of Heliogabalus

    1888
    Oil on canvas
    52 x 84 1/8 inches (132.1 x 213.9 cm)
    Private collection
    Opus 283.
    Added 9/24/2001

    The author of over 700 poems and prose poems, Clark Ashton Smith (1893-1961) continued well into the twentieth century the Decadent and Symbolist traditions of Charles Baudelaire, Paul Verlaine, and Algernon Swinburne. Born in Long Valley, California, C.A. Smith was hailed early as a poetic prodigy, and compared to Keats and Shelley. He was distinguished by a sure and delicate sense of rhythm and a taste for exotic or archaic words. In this he resembled his English contemporary Rupert Brooke (1887-1915), who along with Smith combined a sensuous response to life with a world-weary attitude to love. In their love for the rare, the exquisite, the gemlike, and even the perverse, they might be described as fin de siecle.
        Fin de siecle also is the subject, if not the treatment, of Alma-Tadema's delicately wrought masterpiece The Roses of Heliogabalus. There is no known connection between the poem and the painting other than the choice of the same incident from the life of 3rd century Roman emperor Heliogabalus (Varius Avitus Bassus). The episode is that of Heliogabalus literally (and fatally) smothering his guests in a shower of rose-petals. Alma-Tadema, unlike Smith, has eschewed the morbid connotations of this subject and focussed more on the frolicsome pleasures of the Roman aristocracy. Frolicsome was not the process of painting this piece, which took some time and labour, with Tadema having to import roses out of season.
        C.A. Smith's poem is an interesting counterpart to Alma-Tadema's painting as it focusses more on the personality of the emperor, who is seen as something of a decadent aesthete. An exhaustive search has not turned up an individual called 'Christophe des Laurières', and is assumed by this author to be Clark Ashton Smith writing pseudonymously.

    Heliogabalus
    Clark Ashton Smith
    Translated from Christophe des Laurières
        I

        He, the supreme idealist of Sin,
        Through scarlet days a white perfection sought —
        To make of lyric deed and lyric thought
        One music of perverse accord, wherein
        The songless blatancy and banal din
        Of all the world should perish: he had wrought
        From Vice a pure, Pentelic Venus, fraught
        With lines of light and terror, that should win
        The plaudits of the stars. . . . But prevalent
        For him, above the achievable desire,
        And Life perfectible by Sin and Art,
        Such lusts as leave the Titans impotent
        Allured, and Life and Sin, in worlds apart,
        Were fair with suns of quintessential fire.

    Source: The Eldritch Dark.
    The Roses of Heliogabalus
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    The Vintage Festival

    1870
    Oil on canvas
    30 1/4 x 69 5/8 inches (77 x 177 cm)
    Private collection
    Added 9/24/2001

    The Vintage Festival
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    Sappho and Alcaeus

    1881
    Oil on canvas
    25 7/8 x 48 inches (66 x 122 cm)
    Private collection
    Added 9/24/2001

    Sappho and Alcaeus
    Download: HI-RES image
     
    A Difference of Opinion

    1896
    Oil on canvas
    15 x 9 inches (38.10 x 22.86 cm)
    Collection of Fred and Sherry Ross, USA
    Added 9/24/2001

    A Difference of Opinion
    Download: HI-RES image
     
    Among the Ruins

    1902 - 1904
    Oil on canvas
    9 3/8 x 15 1/4 inches (24 x 39 cm)
    Private collection
    L. Alma Tadema OP CCCLXXII
    Added 12/26/2006

    Commissioned by M. Knoedler & Co, New York in 1902, until 1903;
    Judge Samuel L. Bronson, New York and New Haven;
    American Art Galleries, until 1907;
    Meyer H. Lehman, until 1911;
    M. Knoedler, New York, until 1917;
    Joseph A. Skinner, Holyoke, Massachusetts;
    Sotheby’s, New York, 29 October 1981, lot 88
    Among the Ruins
     






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