Welcome To The House From The Flower Book

Technique: Giclée quality print
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More about this artwork

The artwork titled "Welcome To The House" by Edward Burne-Jones is a beautifully delicate and ethereal illustration. This piece depicts an angel guiding a small child towards a doorway, which seems to symbolize a passage or an entry into a new phase. The angel is adorned in a flowing robe, its wings gently enveloping the child, suggesting protection and guidance. The child, dressed in a simple, light garment, looks up trustingly at the angel.The setting is softly illuminated, with golden and earthy tones that give the piece a serene, almost celestial feeling. The background features a rustic door, textured and aged, reinforcing the idea of entering somewhere significant and timeless.The circular format of the image, combined with the gentle, almost dreamlike quality of the figures, enhances the spiritual and intimate atmosphere of the scene. Overall, Burne-Jones' work embodies a moment of tender guidance, underlined by a sense of sacred mystery.

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Sir Edward Burne-Jones (1833-1898) was a British designer and Victorian narrative painter. He was born in Birmingham to a picture-framer. He intended to become a minister and studied theology at Oxford. However, his life took a turn when he met William Morris. Together they formed The Brotherhood, a society worshipping the poets and architecture of the middle ages. They both worked together on several projects for Morris & Co. Burne-Jones designed tapestries, jewellery, sculptures, ceramics, furniture and stained glass for the company. His artworks truly captured the spirit of the nineteenth century and the Arts and Crafts movement. In recent decades his art has had a renaissance and become among the most expensive pre-raphaelite artworks to be sold at auction.