Mary Frances Crane (née Andrews) as Laura; Walter Crane as Cimabue
8 of 17 portraits of Walter Crane
Mary Frances Crane (née Andrews) as Laura; Walter Crane as Cimabue
by Sir Emery Walker
whole-plate glass negative, 1897?
Given by Emery Walker Ltd, 1956
Photographs Collection
NPG x19680
Click on the links below to find out more:
Sittersback to top
- Mary Frances Crane (née Andrews), Wife of Walter Crane. Sitter in 1 portrait.
- Walter Crane (1845-1915), Illustrator, designer, painter and socialist. Sitter in 17 portraits.
Artistback to top
- Sir Emery Walker (1851-1933), Process-engraver and printer. Artist associated with 109 portraits, Sitter in 10 portraits.
This portraitback to top
The actor, Henry Irving, commissioned Crane to capture the effect of his tableau vivant, which he based on Sir Frederick Leighton's famous painting Cimabue's Madonna carried through Florence (1853-5). Crane recalled he had played the thirteenth-century Florentine painter Cimabue 'in the white costume in which Leighton painted him'. The resulting watercolour, The Apotheosis of Italian Art (1885) reprised the tableau, featuring Crane's wife as Laura, the poet Petrarch's beloved, and their son Lionel as the painter Giotto. These nostalgic photographs, taken in a private setting around 1897 by Sir Emery Walker, another key figure in the Arts and Crafts movement, paid homage to the earlier masquerade.



