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PRE-RAPHAELITE
CATS
Susan Herbert
Susan Herbert's
feline versions of famous paintings have found an appreciative audience
among both cat and art lovers. It was inevitable that she should be
attracted to the works of the Pre-Raphaelite painters, whose heyday
was in the latter half of the nineteenth century, but whose popularity
has reached new heights today.
Well-known
works by such artists as Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Ford Madox Brown, Edward
Burne-Jones, and William Holman Hunt can be viewed in a new and entrancing
way when their protagonists are endearing cats. The Beggar Maid, "more
beautiful than day" in Tennyson's poem, takes on a particularly touching
relationship with King Cophetua, while Medea gives new meaning to the
word enchantress as she prepares the ingredients for a spell. And were
ever two creatures so frightened and so abandoned as the poor cat princes
wickedly imprisoned in the tower, or two lovers so sad and so stoical
as the young officer cat and his fiance on the eve of the Battle of
Waterloo?
A special feature
of this book is its inclusion of black-and-white reproductions of all
the original paintings that have inspired Herbert. They afford interesting
and surprising comparisons, concluding a book of irresistible delights
on every page.
Susan Herbert's
many previous successes include: Impressionist Cats, Medieval
Cats, The Cats History of Western Art, and most recently,
Catropolitan Opera.
ISBN 0-500-01912-6
· 7 3/4" x 91/2" ·
60 illustrations, 30 in color · 64 pages · GIFT / ART / PETS
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