Liberty
Maker
Edward Burne-Jones
(British, 1833 - 1898)
Maker
Morris and Company
(London, British, 1861 - 1940)
Additional Title(s)
- Design for Stained Glass
Collections
ClassificationsDRAWINGS
Dateca. 1896
Mediumblack, white, and blue chalk on buff paper
Dimensions54 1/2 x 18 1/2 in. (138.4 x 47 cm.)
DescriptionOutline of lancet window, with female figure turned slightly to viewer's left holding a wing in each hand.
Inscribedverso: "F.P. 481 MORTON/ 'LIBERTY'/ one of three lights/ Designed by the late Sir Edward Burne-Jones Bart."
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens
Label TextIn this drawing Burne-Jones has not confined the figure within the window panel, but has depicted the symbolic removal of Liberty's wings, the right one extending beyond the left edge of the design. The simple, clean outlines of the drapery and head of this figure emphasize her statuesque pose. Like many of Burne-Jones's designs, Liberty was reused several times in later window commissions. Burne-Jones (1833-1898) began designing for stained glass at the age of twenty-four, before the firm was founded, and, by 1875, was the sole designer of the firm's stained glass. He continued to produce new cartoons until his death in 1898. He frequently designed only the figures for a particular window, leaving the background design to Morris or Webb or in later years to the glass painters in the firm's studio.Status
Not on viewObject number2000.5.514
Edward Burne-Jones
1898
Object number: 2000.5.530.5
Edward Burne-Jones
ca. 1902
Object number: 2000.5.58