The third in a series of exhibitions focussing on Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery’s outstanding collection of nineteenth-century drawings, the exhibition is the result of a three-year collaborative research project with the University of Birmingham during which the postgraduate doctoral student Laura MacCulloch has catalogued the Museums’ collection of 174 works on paper by Madox Brown.
Revealing a remarkable strength and diversity the collection reveals the importance of Madox Brown’s academic art training and early historical and literary work when living in Paris and Rome. The actual process of drawing is seen as the informing means of working out elaborate compositions for such ambitious historical paintings as Chaucer at the Court of Edward III.
Over five decades of constant artistic activity, Madox Brown produced iconic observations of modern nineteenth-century life. The importance of his wife, Emma Hill, as his most influential model is also revealed in a series of head studies alongside such landmark paintings as The Pretty Baa Lambs.