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		<title>National Gallery of Australia | Audio Tour | The Edwardians</title>
		<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
		<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
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		<description>Audio guide to works from the NGA exhibition Grace Cossington Smith: A retrospective exhibition, shown at the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra 4 March – 13 June 2005</description>
		<itunes:subtitle>National Gallery of Australia | Audio Tour | The Edwardians</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Audio guide to works from the NGA exhibition Grace Cossington Smith: A retrospective exhibition, shown at the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra 4 March – 13 June 2005</itunes:summary>
		<language>en</language>
		<copyright> © 2007 National Gallery of Australia, Canberra. All Rights Reserved.</copyright>
		<itunes:owner>
			<itunes:name>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:name>
			<itunes:email>ngawebmanager@nga.gov.au</itunes:email>
		</itunes:owner>
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			<url>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/NGAPodCasts_144.jpg</url>
			<title>National Gallery of Australia | Audio Tour | The Edwardians</title>
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<width>144</width>
			<height>144</height>
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		<category>Visual Arts</category>
		<itunes:category text="Arts">
			<itunes:category text="Visual Arts" />
		</itunes:category>
		<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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			<title>Introduction</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Introduction</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Introduction</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Introduction</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/Intro.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:56 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:54</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Charles CONDER, A decoration [Formerly listed in Titan as &quot;A decoration (on silk?)&quot;] (1894-1904)</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>A decoration was once owned by Pickford Waller, an English designer and a collector of Conder’s work, as well as paintings by Spencer Gore, George Lambert, William Nicholson, Charles Shannon and Whistler. In his house in Pimlico, Waller placed this large decorative piece in a room that was entirely hung with Conder’s works. It includes features that are typical of Conder’s work, such as the oval medallion, wreaths and ribbons, and decorative borders.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Charles CONDER, A decoration [Formerly listed in Titan as &quot;A decoration (on silk?)&quot;] (1894-1904), watercolour, silk with unknown, non-rigid backing, 224.0 (h) x 127.0 (w) cm, Collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Purchased 1978</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>A decoration was once owned by Pickford Waller, an English designer and a collector of Conder’s work, as well as paintings by Spencer Gore, George Lambert, William Nicholson, Charles Shannon and Whistler. In his house in Pimlico, Waller placed this large decorative piece in a room that was entirely hung with Conder’s works. It includes features that are typical of Conder’s work, such as the oval medallion, wreaths and ribbons, and decorative borders.</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/30890.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:02</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Max MELDRUM, The yellow screen (Family group) [Le pararent jaune The family group] 1910-11</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>The figures represented in The yellow screen (Family group) are Max Meldrum, his wife Jeanne and his eldest daughter Ida. Meldrum was greatly influenced by the work and technique of the Spanish artist Velasquez. As a result, this work becomes as a study of tone, the forms existing only as they are defined by light.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Max MELDRUM, The yellow screen (Family group) [Le pararent jaune The family group] 1910-11, oil on canvas mounted on composition board, 217.5 (h) x 140.0 (w) cm, Collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Purchased 1969</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>The figures represented in The yellow screen (Family group) are Max Meldrum, his wife Jeanne and his eldest daughter Ida. Meldrum was greatly influenced by the work and technique of the Spanish artist Velasquez. As a result, this work becomes as a study of tone, the forms existing only as they are defined by light.</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/41519.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:08</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Harold PARKER, Orpheus 1904</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>In the 1880s, British sculpture was revitalised with the introduction of ‘art bronzes’, or small-scale sculptures. The aim was to democratise sculpture, to make it an affordable domestic ornament for the increasingly affluent Victorian and later Edwardian middle classes.

In Greek mythology Orpheus is the musician who descended to the underworld in an attempt to retrieve his love, Eurydice, back to the living. Parker’s Orpheus plucks his lyre, a symbol of his divine talent, yet his melancholic gaze foreshadows his human vulnerability and the tragic end to his quest.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Harold PARKER, Orpheus 1904, cast bronze, patinated, marble base, sculpture 43.6 (h) x 15.0 (w) x 17.5 (d) cm, signed and dated between feet of Orpheus, inscribed, &quot;Harold Parker/ 1904&quot; Gift of William Richard Cumming 1984</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>In the 1880s, British sculpture was revitalised with the introduction of ‘art bronzes’, or small-scale sculptures. The aim was to democratise sculpture, to make it an affordable domestic ornament for the increasingly affluent Victorian and later Edwardian middle classes.

In Greek mythology Orpheus is the musician who descended to the underworld in an attempt to retrieve his love, Eurydice, back to the living. Parker’s Orpheus plucks his lyre, a symbol of his divine talent, yet his melancholic gaze foreshadows his human vulnerability and the tragic end to his quest.</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/98515.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:00:38</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Henri GAUDIER-BRZESKA, L&apos;Oiseau de feu [Firebird] 1912</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>In June 1912 The Firebird was performed in London for the first time by Serge Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes. Gaudier-Brzeska portrayed the moment in Scene One when Ivan the Tsarevich captures the Firebird. He translated the figures into a series of simplified planes and conveyed movement through the crouching figure linking arms with the upwardly thrusting Firebird.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Henri GAUDIER-BRZESKA, L&apos;Oiseau de feu [Firebird] 1912, sculpture, plaster with black paint, 63.6 (h) x 34.0 (w) x 27.0 (d) cm signed, incised lower right base, &quot;H. Gaudier/ Brzeska&quot; Collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Purchased 1981</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>In June 1912 The Firebird was performed in London for the first time by Serge Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes. Gaudier-Brzeska portrayed the moment in Scene One when Ivan the Tsarevich captures the Firebird. He translated the figures into a series of simplified planes and conveyed movement through the crouching figure linking arms with the upwardly thrusting Firebird.</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/112528.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:00:54</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Rupert BUNNY, Nocturne [The distant song I] c.1908</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>In this dreamy scene three elaborately gowned women with accessories of roses and richly coloured shawls and fans, pose together on a balcony. Nocturne is one of a series of night balcony scenes that Bunny painted which evoke a mood of intimacy and luxurious leisure, of perfume, poetry and distant music. Though ostensibly intimate, the scenario is theatrical.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Rupert BUNNY, Nocturne [The distant song I] c.1908, oil on canvas, 220.8 (h) x 180.5 (w) cm, signed l.l., oil &quot;Rupert C W Bunny&quot;. not dated, Collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Purchased 1976</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>In this dreamy scene three elaborately gowned women with accessories of roses and richly coloured shawls and fans, pose together on a balcony. Nocturne is one of a series of night balcony scenes that Bunny painted which evoke a mood of intimacy and luxurious leisure, of perfume, poetry and distant music. Though ostensibly intimate, the scenario is theatrical.</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/115735.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:32</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Harold GILMAN, The Negro gardener c.1905</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>The Negro gardener reflects Harold Gilman’s admiration of Velasquez and the Spanish tradition of portraiture. Gilman depicted his subject in the pose of a gentleman; with the gardener’s shovel replacing the gentleman’s walking cane. In portraying a servant as if someone of social standing, Gilman approached his subject in a similar fashion to Agnes Goodsir when she depicted a servant in La Femme de ménage.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Harold GILMAN, The Negro gardener c.1905, oil on canvas, 133.0 (h) x 77.5 (w) cm, Langan&apos;s Restaurants, London</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>The Negro gardener reflects Harold Gilman’s admiration of Velasquez and the Spanish tradition of portraiture. Gilman depicted his subject in the pose of a gentleman; with the gardener’s shovel replacing the gentleman’s walking cane. In portraying a servant as if someone of social standing, Gilman approached his subject in a similar fashion to Agnes Goodsir when she depicted a servant in La Femme de ménage.</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126187.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:00:49</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>E. Phillips FOX, Bathing hour c.1909</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Bathing hour is an image of leisure. Fox captured sunlight and colour in a scene of happy holiday-makers enjoying healthy outdoor pursuits. He showed a mother in a loose fitting dress drying her young child. Set apart in the intimacy of their domestic ritual, Fox emphasised the bond between mother and child. At the time it was painted Fox’s depiction of a naked child in such a setting was unconventional.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>E. Phillips FOX, Bathing hour c.1909, oil on canvas, 180.4 (h) x 112.0 (w) cm, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, T.C. Stewart Bequest Fund in 1952</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Bathing hour is an image of leisure. Fox captured sunlight and colour in a scene of happy holiday-makers enjoying healthy outdoor pursuits. He showed a mother in a loose fitting dress drying her young child. Set apart in the intimacy of their domestic ritual, Fox emphasised the bond between mother and child. At the time it was painted Fox’s depiction of a naked child in such a setting was unconventional.</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126199.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:02</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>William STRANG, Bank holiday 1912</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>From around 1910 William Strang painted images of his family and friends wearing fashionable clothes and placed in imaginary settings in which he conveyed aspects of male–female relationships. In Bank holiday he suggested a young couple’s awkwardness when dining out, and included two symbols of devotion: the flowers and the pet. Strang created a deliberately understated image that allowed viewers to find their own interpretation.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>William STRANG, Bank holiday 1912, oil on canvas, 152.7 (h) x 122.6 (w) cm, Tate, London, presented by F. Howard through the National Loan Exhibitions Committee in 1922</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>From around 1910 William Strang painted images of his family and friends wearing fashionable clothes and placed in imaginary settings in which he conveyed aspects of male–female relationships. In Bank holiday he suggested a young couple’s awkwardness when dining out, and included two symbols of devotion: the flowers and the pet. Strang created a deliberately understated image that allowed viewers to find their own interpretation.</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126201.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:25</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>John Singer SARGENT, Almina, daughter of Asher Wertheimer 1908</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Almina was the fifth daughter of the wealthy and well-known Bond Street dealer, Asher Wertheimer. The portrayal of European women as alluring ‘orientals’ was fashionable at the turn of the 20th century. Sargent portrayed Almina dressed in exotic costume with an ivory-white Persian dress, a turban entwined with pearls and holding a sarod, a musical instrument from northern India.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>John Singer SARGENT, Almina, daughter of Asher Wertheimer 1908, oil on canvas, 134.0 (h) x 101.0 (w) cm, Tate, London, presented by the widow and family of Asher Wertheimer in accordance with his wishes in 1922</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Almina was the fifth daughter of the wealthy and well-known Bond Street dealer, Asher Wertheimer. The portrayal of European women as alluring ‘orientals’ was fashionable at the turn of the 20th century. Sargent portrayed Almina dressed in exotic costume with an ivory-white Persian dress, a turban entwined with pearls and holding a sarod, a musical instrument from northern India.</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126206.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:00:58</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Philip Wilson STEER, Seated nude: The black hat c.1900</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Steer painted many nudes in which his figures are set in a domestic environment. In Seated nude:The black hat he depicted his model sitting at ease among her discarded clothes, still wearing her hat. Her incomplete state of undress emphasises her nakedness. Steer never exhibited this work because his friends suggested that it was improper to paint a nude wearing a hat.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Philip Wilson STEER, Seated nude: The black hat c.1900, oil on canvas, 50.8 (h) x 40.6 (w) cm, Tate, London, presented by Contemporary Art Society in 1941</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Steer painted many nudes in which his figures are set in a domestic environment. In Seated nude:The black hat he depicted his model sitting at ease among her discarded clothes, still wearing her hat. Her incomplete state of undress emphasises her nakedness. Steer never exhibited this work because his friends suggested that it was improper to paint a nude wearing a hat.</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126208.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:10</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Giovanni BOLDINI, Portrait of a lady, Mrs Lionel Phillips 1903</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Florence, Lady Phillips (1863–1940) was the daughter of a South African land surveyor. In 1885, she met and married Lionel Phillips, who had become wealthy in the 1880s by mining diamonds. They lived in England from 1898 to 1906, during which time Lady Phillips developed a keen interest in art and bought contemporary works — by William Orpen, William Rothenstein, Walter Sickert and Philip Wilson Steer, as well as by Pissarro, Monet and Sisley. In 1919, her daughter Edith married the artist William Nicholson.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Giovanni BOLDINI, Portrait of a lady, Mrs Lionel Phillips 1903, oil on canvas, 193.0 (h) x 155.0 (w) cm, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Florence, Lady Phillips (1863–1940) was the daughter of a South African land surveyor. In 1885, she met and married Lionel Phillips, who had become wealthy in the 1880s by mining diamonds. They lived in England from 1898 to 1906, during which time Lady Phillips developed a keen interest in art and bought contemporary works — by William Orpen, William Rothenstein, Walter Sickert and Philip Wilson Steer, as well as by Pissarro, Monet and Sisley. In 1919, her daughter Edith married the artist William Nicholson.</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126215.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:02</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>James WHISTLER, Arrangement in black no. 5: Lady Meux 1881</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Valerie Susan Langdon — the subject of this work — caused a scandal in 1878 when she married in secret Henry Meux, the heir to a brewery fortune. Valerie said she was an actress before her marriage, but many suggested she had worked under another name at a dance hall frequented by prostitutes. In a bid to gain his wife a place in polite Victorian society, Henry bought Lady Meux the diamonds that Whistler portrayed her wearing in this painting. However, neither the jewels nor her Egyptian antiquities collection could gain her the position that she desired.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>James WHISTLER, Arrangement in black no. 5: Lady Meux 1881, oil on canvas, 194.3 (h) x 130.2 (w) cm, Honolulu Academy of Arts, Hawaii, purchased with donations from the community and Robert Allerton Fund in 1967</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Valerie Susan Langdon — the subject of this work — caused a scandal in 1878 when she married in secret Henry Meux, the heir to a brewery fortune. Valerie said she was an actress before her marriage, but many suggested she had worked under another name at a dance hall frequented by prostitutes. In a bid to gain his wife a place in polite Victorian society, Henry bought Lady Meux the diamonds that Whistler portrayed her wearing in this painting. However, neither the jewels nor her Egyptian antiquities collection could gain her the position that she desired.</itunes:summary>
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			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126221.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:07</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Rupert BUNNY, Madame Melba 1901-02</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Nellie Melba was the professional name of Helen Porter Mitchell (1861–1931). The Australian soprano was born in Melbourne, the city from which she took her name. She sang at Covent Garden, London, from 1888 to 1926, and at intervals with the Metropolitan Opera Company, New York. Famous for her lyric and coloratura roles, Sarah Bernhardt described her voice as being ‘pure crystal’ and Percy Grainger claimed that her voice always made him ‘mindsee Australia’s landscapes’. When Bunny painted this portrait, Melba was at the pinnacle of her success and beginning her artistic partnership with the tenor, Enrico Caruso.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Rupert BUNNY, Madame Melba 1901-02, oil on canvas, 245.3 (h) x 153.0 (w) cm, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne Purchased through The Art Foundation of Victoria with the assistance of Dinah and Henry Krongold CBE, Founder Benefactors in 1980</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Nellie Melba was the professional name of Helen Porter Mitchell (1861–1931). The Australian soprano was born in Melbourne, the city from which she took her name. She sang at Covent Garden, London, from 1888 to 1926, and at intervals with the Metropolitan Opera Company, New York. Famous for her lyric and coloratura roles, Sarah Bernhardt described her voice as being ‘pure crystal’ and Percy Grainger claimed that her voice always made him ‘mindsee Australia’s landscapes’. When Bunny painted this portrait, Melba was at the pinnacle of her success and beginning her artistic partnership with the tenor, Enrico Caruso.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126222.mp3" length="422769" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126222.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:38</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>George LAMBERT, Lotty and a lady 1906</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Lambert presented Lotty in command of the room, comfortably looking out at the viewer. The lady, dressed for outdoors in hat and gloves, is tenuously seated in this room; her body silhouetted against the door suggests her imminent escape. It was rare for a lady to venture into a kitchen, and in portraying Lotty and the lady together Lambert challenged traditional Edwardian social roles and behaviours.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>George LAMBERT, Lotty and a lady 1906, oil on canvas, 103.0 (h) x 128.3 (w) cm, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Felton Bequest in 1910</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Lambert presented Lotty in command of the room, comfortably looking out at the viewer. The lady, dressed for outdoors in hat and gloves, is tenuously seated in this room; her body silhouetted against the door suggests her imminent escape. It was rare for a lady to venture into a kitchen, and in portraying Lotty and the lady together Lambert challenged traditional Edwardian social roles and behaviours.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126229.mp3" length="325668" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126229.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:12</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>William NICHOLSON, La Belle chauffeuse 1904</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>La Belle chauffeuse is a portrait of the playwright Sylvia Bristowe. Nicholson loved style and often included costume in his paintings. In depicting Sylivia Bristowe in a motoring outfit he made a statement about her being a modern woman, adopting the latest modes of transport as well as being wealthy enough to own a car.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>William NICHOLSON, La Belle chauffeuse 1904, oil on canvas, 76.3 (h) x 63.8 (w) cm, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne Felton Bequest in 1904</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>La Belle chauffeuse is a portrait of the playwright Sylvia Bristowe. Nicholson loved style and often included costume in his paintings. In depicting Sylivia Bristowe in a motoring outfit he made a statement about her being a modern woman, adopting the latest modes of transport as well as being wealthy enough to own a car.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126237.mp3" length="162988" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126237.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:00:33</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>George LAMBERT, Important people 1914, 1921</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>In Important people Lambert presented a group of ordinary people at a time when the subjects of group portraits were often people with wealth or status in society. He mocked the assumption that importance is a matter of money or property. He created an allegorical image representing a range of human qualities that he regarded as important: motherhood, physical prowess, business acumen, and new life and energy.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>George LAMBERT, Important people 1914, 1921, oil on canvas, 134.7 (h) x 170.3 (w) cm, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>In Important people Lambert presented a group of ordinary people at a time when the subjects of group portraits were often people with wealth or status in society. He mocked the assumption that importance is a matter of money or property. He created an allegorical image representing a range of human qualities that he regarded as important: motherhood, physical prowess, business acumen, and new life and energy.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126246.mp3" length="301426" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126246.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:04</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>George FRAMPTON, Peter Pan 1912</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Peter Pan is a small-scale version of George Frampton’s sculpture unveiled in Kensington Gardens in 1912. Edwardian society was enchanted by JM Barrie’s story of Peter Pan. The subject reflects a contemporary fascination with paganism and a belief in the power of nature and natural forces.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>George FRAMPTON, Peter Pan 1912, sculpture, bronze, 46.6 (h) x 28.5 (w) x 25.0 (d) cm, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Peter Pan is a small-scale version of George Frampton’s sculpture unveiled in Kensington Gardens in 1912. Edwardian society was enchanted by JM Barrie’s story of Peter Pan. The subject reflects a contemporary fascination with paganism and a belief in the power of nature and natural forces.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126250.mp3" length="192893" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126250.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:00:44</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>John Singer SARGENT, The fountain, Villa Torlonia, Frascati, Italy 1907</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>In The fountain, Villa Torlonia, Frascati, Italy Sargent portrayed the artist Jane de Glehn sketching the scene in front of her, watched by her artist husband Wilfrid. Jane described sitting for the picture in a letter to her sister on 6 October 1907: ‘Sargent is doing a most amusing and killingly funny picture in oils of me perched on a balustrade painting. It is the very ‘spit’ of me. He has stuck Wilfrid in looking at my sketch with rather a contemptuous expression … I am all in white with a white painting blouse and a pale blue veil around my hat. I look rather like a pierrot, but have rather a worried expression as every painter should have who isn’t a perfect fool, says Sargent. Wilfrid is in short sleeves, very idle and good for nothing’.  (quoted in Kilmurray and Ormond, 1988)</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>John Singer SARGENT, The fountain, Villa Torlonia, Frascati, Italy 1907, oil on canvas, 71.4 (h) x 56.5 (w) cm, The Art Institute of Chicago, American Art Collection</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>In The fountain, Villa Torlonia, Frascati, Italy Sargent portrayed the artist Jane de Glehn sketching the scene in front of her, watched by her artist husband Wilfrid. Jane described sitting for the picture in a letter to her sister on 6 October 1907: ‘Sargent is doing a most amusing and killingly funny picture in oils of me perched on a balustrade painting. It is the very ‘spit’ of me. He has stuck Wilfrid in looking at my sketch with rather a contemptuous expression … I am all in white with a white painting blouse and a pale blue veil around my hat. I look rather like a pierrot, but have rather a worried expression as every painter should have who isn’t a perfect fool, says Sargent. Wilfrid is in short sleeves, very idle and good for nothing’.  (quoted in Kilmurray and Ormond, 1988)</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126284.mp3" length="322295" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126284.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:08</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>C.R.W. NEVINSON, Returning to the trenches 1914</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Nevinson witnessed the heavy casualties and widespread devastation of the first battles of the First World War. At the front, he made notes and sketches which he later worked up into drawings, paintings and drypoints. In Returning to the trenches he captured, through angular lines and abstract blocks of colour, the movement of an army on the march. He portrayed the column of men marching as if they were robots, caught up in a destiny over which they had no control.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>C.R.W. NEVINSON, Returning to the trenches 1914, oil on canvas, 51.2 (h) x 76.8 (w) cm, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, gift of the Massey Collection of English Painting in 1946</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Nevinson witnessed the heavy casualties and widespread devastation of the first battles of the First World War. At the front, he made notes and sketches which he later worked up into drawings, paintings and drypoints. In Returning to the trenches he captured, through angular lines and abstract blocks of colour, the movement of an army on the march. He portrayed the column of men marching as if they were robots, caught up in a destiny over which they had no control.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126490.mp3" length="356098" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126490.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:25</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>John Singer SARGENT, Lord Ribblesdale 1902</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>This portrait of Thomas Lister, 4th Baron Ribblesdale, came to epitomise the Edwardian aristocrat: a sportsman, soldier, courtier and landowner. Sargent portrayed him as being alert and upright, a man with a strong physical presence, immaculately dressed, but with an expression that suggests he may have been stubborn at times. While Sargent revealed everything about his subject, in another sense he gave nothing away — he presented Ribblesdale’s public face and not his private life.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>John Singer SARGENT, Lord Ribblesdale 1902, oil on canvas, 258.5 (h) x 143.5 (w) cm, The National Gallery, London, presented by Lord Ribblesdale in 1916, in memory of Lady Ribblesdale and his sons</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>This portrait of Thomas Lister, 4th Baron Ribblesdale, came to epitomise the Edwardian aristocrat: a sportsman, soldier, courtier and landowner. Sargent portrayed him as being alert and upright, a man with a strong physical presence, immaculately dressed, but with an expression that suggests he may have been stubborn at times. While Sargent revealed everything about his subject, in another sense he gave nothing away — he presented Ribblesdale’s public face and not his private life.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126771.mp3" length="288039" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126771.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:51 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:07</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>William ROTHENSTEIN, The Browning readers 1900</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>The models for The Browning readers were the artist’s wife, Alice, and her sister, Grace, wife of the artist William Orpen. Rothenstein depicted the readers in a quietly lit domestic parlour, decorated in an artistic ‘oriental’ style. This work was influential on contemporary interior decoration. The simplicity of the decoration shown in this painting — the brass plate and the blue and white china and the glass vase with a branch of spring blossom — started a fashion for uncluttered interiors.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>William ROTHENSTEIN, The Browning readers 1900, oil on canvas, 76.0 (h) x 96.5 (w) cm, Bradford Art Galleries and Museums, presented by Loritz Rothenstein in 1911</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>The models for The Browning readers were the artist’s wife, Alice, and her sister, Grace, wife of the artist William Orpen. Rothenstein depicted the readers in a quietly lit domestic parlour, decorated in an artistic ‘oriental’ style. This work was influential on contemporary interior decoration. The simplicity of the decoration shown in this painting — the brass plate and the blue and white china and the glass vase with a branch of spring blossom — started a fashion for uncluttered interiors.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126772.mp3" length="335929" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126772.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:50 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:20</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>J. FERGUSSON, Le Manteau chinois 1909</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>By the end of the Edwardian era designers had embraced fashion inspired by the Orient and stylish women wore harem pants, lampshade tunics and turbans in vibrant colours, with Eastern bejewelled slippers as accessories. In Le Manteau chinois Fergusson has used a flat, decorative style, emphasising basic shapes and bright colours, rather than tonality and modelling.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>J. FERGUSSON, Le Manteau chinois 1909, oil on canvas, 195.5 (h) x 97.0 (w) cm, The Fergusson Gallery, Perth and Kinross Council, Scotland</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>By the end of the Edwardian era designers had embraced fashion inspired by the Orient and stylish women wore harem pants, lampshade tunics and turbans in vibrant colours, with Eastern bejewelled slippers as accessories. In Le Manteau chinois Fergusson has used a flat, decorative style, emphasising basic shapes and bright colours, rather than tonality and modelling.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126789.mp3" length="225483" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/126789.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:50 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:00:49</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Alfred MUNNINGS, A study of a male nude in Julian&apos;s atelier, Paris c.1902</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>A study of a male nude in Julian’s atelier, Paris exemplifies works produced at the Académie Julian by many artists at this time. Typically, the subject is observed against the light, contre-jour, involving a close study of local colour. Munnings described his time at the Académie Julian in the first volume of his autobiography, An artist’s life(1950): Julian’s in the Rue du Dragon soon became a second home … All were friends. Some advanced students were painting the most wonderful studies. Large canvases surprised us with their truth, drawing and colour … Youth, enthusiasm and small expenses bore us along week by week.’</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Alfred MUNNINGS, A study of a male nude in Julian&apos;s atelier, Paris c.1902, oil on canvas, image 82.4 (h) x 66.0 (w) cm, The Sir Alfred Munnings Art Museum, Dedham, Essex</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>A study of a male nude in Julian’s atelier, Paris exemplifies works produced at the Académie Julian by many artists at this time. Typically, the subject is observed against the light, contre-jour, involving a close study of local colour. Munnings described his time at the Académie Julian in the first volume of his autobiography, An artist’s life(1950): Julian’s in the Rue du Dragon soon became a second home … All were friends. Some advanced students were painting the most wonderful studies. Large canvases surprised us with their truth, drawing and colour … Youth, enthusiasm and small expenses bore us along week by week.’</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127013.mp3" length="250963" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127013.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:50 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:00:52</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Rupert BUNNY, An idyll 1901</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Throughout the 19th century and in the beginning of the 20th, artists used mythological and allegorical themes as well as classical forms to elevate their subjects.

In An idyll Bunny conveyed the universal and ageless theme of love with two lovers asleep, watched over by Cupid. First exhibited as L’Age d’Or, the image conveys a dream of a golden time, of Olympian gods and goddesses, of Adam and Eve before the Fall and of eternal man and woman.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Rupert BUNNY, An idyll 1901</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Throughout the 19th century and in the beginning of the 20th, artists used mythological and allegorical themes as well as classical forms to elevate their subjects.

In An idyll Bunny conveyed the universal and ageless theme of love with two lovers asleep, watched over by Cupid. First exhibited as L’Age d’Or, the image conveys a dream of a golden time, of Olympian gods and goddesses, of Adam and Eve before the Fall and of eternal man and woman.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127057.mp3" length="295214" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127057.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:50 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:08</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Jean-Philippe WORTH, The Lohengrin cloak c.1890</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Melba wore this cloak for her role as Elsa, in Wagner’s opera Lohengrin. Following her first appearance as Elsa at the Metropolitan Opera Company, the critic for the New York Tribune remarked: ‘the magnificence of her wardrobe was without a parallel as far as the local stage is concerned’. (quoted in Gray, 2004)  Melba always wore her own costumes, not those belonging to the theatre as had been the standard practice.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Jean-Philippe WORTH, The Lohengrin cloak c.1890, Textile, 223.5 (h) x 406.5 (w) cm, The Arts Centre, Performing Arts Collection, Melbourne, gift of Pamela, Lady Vestey in 1978</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Melba wore this cloak for her role as Elsa, in Wagner’s opera Lohengrin. Following her first appearance as Elsa at the Metropolitan Opera Company, the critic for the New York Tribune remarked: ‘the magnificence of her wardrobe was without a parallel as far as the local stage is concerned’. (quoted in Gray, 2004)  Melba always wore her own costumes, not those belonging to the theatre as had been the standard practice.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127089.mp3" length="381678" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127089.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:50 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:28</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Malcolm DRUMMOND, In the Park (St James&apos;s Park) 1912</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>Of all Drummond’s views of London, In the Park is the largest and most impressive, with the silhouetted figures depicted as if arrested in time. In a review of the 1912 Camden Town Group exhibition, The Times’art critic suggested that the bright colours in Drummond’s work had been inspired by the 1910 exhibition, ‘Manet and the Post-Impressionists’.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Malcolm DRUMMOND, In the Park (St James&apos;s Park) 1912, oil on canvas, 72.5 (h) x 90.0 (w) cm, Southampton City Art Gallery, acquired through the Chipperfield Bequest Fund in 1938</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>Of all Drummond’s views of London, In the Park is the largest and most impressive, with the silhouetted figures depicted as if arrested in time. In a review of the 1912 Camden Town Group exhibition, The Times’art critic suggested that the bright colours in Drummond’s work had been inspired by the 1910 exhibition, ‘Manet and the Post-Impressionists’.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127112.mp3" length="226436" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127112.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:50 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:00:53</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Vanessa BELL, Virginia Woolf 1911-12</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>‘For now she need not think about anybody. She could be herself, by herself … All the being and the doing, expansive, glittering, vocal, evaporated; and one shrunk, with a sense of solemnity, to being oneself … Although she continued to knit, and sat upright, it was thus that she felt herself; and this self having shed its attachments was free for the strangest adventures.’

When Virginia Woolf wrote this of her character Mrs Ramsay in To the lighthouse (1927), Woolf could just as easily have been describing herself as she was painted by her sister in this work. Bell’s portrait captured a moment of quiet intimacy between the sisters, with Virginia knitting or sewing, quite unselfconsciously ‘being herself’.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Vanessa BELL, Virginia Woolf 1911-12, oil on board, 40.0 (h) x 34.0 (w) cm, National Portrait Gallery, London</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>‘For now she need not think about anybody. She could be herself, by herself … All the being and the doing, expansive, glittering, vocal, evaporated; and one shrunk, with a sense of solemnity, to being oneself … Although she continued to knit, and sat upright, it was thus that she felt herself; and this self having shed its attachments was free for the strangest adventures.’

When Virginia Woolf wrote this of her character Mrs Ramsay in To the lighthouse (1927), Woolf could just as easily have been describing herself as she was painted by her sister in this work. Bell’s portrait captured a moment of quiet intimacy between the sisters, with Virginia knitting or sewing, quite unselfconsciously ‘being herself’.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127601.mp3" length="305225" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127601.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:50 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:07</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Gladys REYNELL, Old Irish couple c.1915</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>In Old Irish couple Reynell expressed the quiet dignity of the couple she encountered on her travels in Ireland and suggested their resilience against all odds. In 1915 Reynell’s friend Rose McPherson (Margaret Preston) wrote about the poverty in Ireland: ‘It is almost inconceivable … A family of nine in the ordinary course of events, and the father never hopes to earn more than seven shillings a week, how they feed them I don’t know’.  (quoted in Butler, 1987).</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Gladys REYNELL, Old Irish couple c.1915, oil on canvas, 65.3 (h) x 54.0 (w) cm, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>In Old Irish couple Reynell expressed the quiet dignity of the couple she encountered on her travels in Ireland and suggested their resilience against all odds. In 1915 Reynell’s friend Rose McPherson (Margaret Preston) wrote about the poverty in Ireland: ‘It is almost inconceivable … A family of nine in the ordinary course of events, and the father never hopes to earn more than seven shillings a week, how they feed them I don’t know’.  (quoted in Butler, 1987).</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127603.mp3" length="198511" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127603.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:50 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:00:46</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Ethel CARRICK, Arabs bargaining c.1911</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>In Arabs bargaining Carrick’s interest is as much in describing this commonplace market scene as in constructing a painting of abstract elements and high-keyed and vibrant colours. For Carrick, the intense light and colourful costumes of the Arab people provided a rich visual spectacle that allowed her to experiment with ever more intense blocks of colour and pattern in her work.

Many artists travelled to Morocco to paint. They admired the beauty, the uniqueness of the dress, the brilliance of the light and the unaccustomed brilliance of colour that they found there.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Ethel CARRICK, Arabs bargaining c.1911, oil on canvas, 64.5 (h) x 81.0 (w) cm, Fosters Group, Melbourne</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>In Arabs bargaining Carrick’s interest is as much in describing this commonplace market scene as in constructing a painting of abstract elements and high-keyed and vibrant colours. For Carrick, the intense light and colourful costumes of the Arab people provided a rich visual spectacle that allowed her to experiment with ever more intense blocks of colour and pattern in her work.

Many artists travelled to Morocco to paint. They admired the beauty, the uniqueness of the dress, the brilliance of the light and the unaccustomed brilliance of colour that they found there.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127648.mp3" length="259680" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127648.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:50 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:00:54</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Gwen JOHN, A lady reading c.1909-11</title>
			<itunes:author>National Gallery of Australia</itunes:author>
			<description>John intended the idealised head of this figure to resemble a painting of the Virgin Mary by Dürer. The composition echoes the private and intimate domestic spaces painted by Dutch artists such as Vermeer. A few years before she painted A lady reading Rodin had given John money to move into an unfurnished room, and in this work she expressed her delight in having a room of her own.</description>
			<itunes:subtitle>Gwen JOHN, A lady reading c.1909-11, oil on canvas, 40.3 (h) x 25.4 (w) cm, Tate, London, presented by the Contemporary Art Society in 1917</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>John intended the idealised head of this figure to resemble a painting of the Virgin Mary by Dürer. The composition echoes the private and intimate domestic spaces painted by Dutch artists such as Vermeer. A few years before she painted A lady reading Rodin had given John money to move into an unfurnished room, and in this work she expressed her delight in having a room of her own.</itunes:summary>
			<enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127650.mp3" length="262974" />
			<link>http://nga.gov.au/Exhibition/Edwardians/</link>
			<guid>http://nga.gov.au/PodCasts/GUIDES/EXHIBITION/Edwardians/127650.mp3</guid>
			<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:20:50 +1100</pubDate>
			<category>Visual Arts</category>
			<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
			<itunes:duration>00:01:02</itunes:duration>
			<itunes:keywords>The Edwardians, Visual Art</itunes:keywords>
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