. Dulwich, history and romance : 967-1922. ?J >-(. ( 59 ) Masters from the pictures at Dulwich; severelyhandling some, highly praising others. In 1844 theCollege gave him leave to make water-colours fromthe pictures. It is of interest to add that he used to stroll up anddown Croxted Lane to think out his subjects. Hehimself writes, In Croxted Lane my mother and Iused to gather the first buds of the hawthorn, andthere, in after years, I used to walk in the summershadows . . .to think over any passage I wantedto make better than usual in Modern Painters. Robert Browning lived at Caraberw
. Dulwich, history and romance : 967-1922. ?J >-(. ( 59 ) Masters from the pictures at Dulwich; severelyhandling some, highly praising others. In 1844 theCollege gave him leave to make water-colours fromthe pictures. It is of interest to add that he used to stroll up anddown Croxted Lane to think out his subjects. Hehimself writes, In Croxted Lane my mother and Iused to gather the first buds of the hawthorn, andthere, in after years, I used to walk in the summershadows . . .to think over any passage I wantedto make better than usual in Modern Painters. Robert Browning lived at Caraberwell within aneasy walk of the Gallery, where he first acquired hislove of pictures, and in 1846 he wrote to affectionate appreciation of the Gallery, which heloved. The Royal Academy and the Gallery. It only now remains to explain the historical con-nection of the Royal Academy with the Desenfans in her will refers to Sir Peter FrancisBourgeois desire that the President and Academiciansshould once a year visit the collection, to g
Size: 1288px × 1940px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookiddulwichhisto, bookyear1922