Burne-Jones, Sir Edward Coley,
professional name of EDWARD COLEY JONES
(1833-1898), English painter, designer, and illustrator, born in
Birmingham and educated at the University of Oxford. Trained by the
Pre-Raphaelite painter
Dante Gabriel Rossetti,
Burne-Jones shared the
Pre-Raphaelites concern with restoring to art what they considered
the purity of form, stylization, and high moral tone of medieval
painting and design. His paintings, inspired by medieval, classical,
and biblical themes, are noted for their sentimentality and dreamlike
romanticized style; they are generally considered among the finest
works of the Pre-Raphaelite school. They include
King Cophetua and the Beggar Maid
(1884, Tate Gallery, London).
Burne-Jones was also prominent in the revival of medieval applied arts
led by his Oxford friend the poet and artist William Morris. For
Morris's firm he designed stained-glass windows, mosaics, and
tapestries. His windows can be seen in many English churches,
including Christ Church, Oxford, and Birmingham Cathedral. He also
illustrated books of Morris's Kelmscott Press, notably Chaucer
(1896). Burne-Jones was knighted in 1894.