"Mary Lago's Christiana Herringham and the
Edwardian Art Scene recovers an extraordinary wealth of
detail about a figure who had almost vanished from history. This
is a rare and unusual book by a patient, resourceful, and
passionate scholar."--Frances Spalding
"Christiana Herringham and the Edwardian Art Scene
is well written and provocative, and has the potential to shed
new light on patterns of female philanthropy and art patronage."
--Kathleen D. McCarthy
Christiana Herringham (1852-1929), an expert copyist of the
Italian Old Masters, was an extraordinary and accomplished woman.
Her achievements required a delicate balance, for she had to
negotiate old Victorian restrictions in order "to find and
fortify a place for herself" in the male-dominated spheres of
fine-art administration and public service.
Lady Herringham arrived on the Edwardian art scene with a
translation of Il Libro dell' Arte o Trattato della
Pittura, Cennini's fifteenth-century handbook on fresco
and tempera. It aroused new interest in those techniques and led
to the founding of the Society of Painters in Tempera in 1901. To
preserve Britain's art heritage from buyers abroad, she provided
the money that launched the National Art Collections Fund in
1903, creating what is still a vital and authoritative voice in
Britain's cultural life. Her work as the only woman on the NACF's
first executive committee prepared her to assist in founding the
India Society, which urged respect for indigenous Indian
traditions of the fine arts and encouraged appreciation for them
in England.
Her concern for undervalued art led her to India to copy the
Buddhist wall paintings in the Ajanta caves near Hyderabad. Her
copies are the only color record of their condition during those
years. Sadly, as she returned from India in 1911, Lady Herringham
began to suffer from delusions of pursuit and persecution and
withdrew to an asylum, where she remained until her death. There
were then no satisfactory explanations for her symptoms, only the
Victorian medical premise that insanity was an extension of
physical illness.
A distinguished Edwardian scholar, Mary Lago has used her
knowledge of the cultural history of the period to bring
significant insight into the personal and professional conflicts
Lady Herringham faced during a time of limited opportunities for
women. Lago also discusses the issue of nationalism in art and
the role of colonial imperialism in defining and preserving art.
As a postscript, she presents the fascinating possibility that
Christiana Herringham's experience may have inspired the
character of Mrs. Moore in E. M. Forster's A Passage to
India.
About the Author
Mary Lago is the author and editor of many books, including
E. M. Forster: A Literary Life. Professor Emerita of
English from the University of Missouri, she lives in Columbia,
Missouri.