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Browning's House
Browning's House
Browning's House

Browning's House

Maker (British (English), 1867-1956)
Date1912
MediumEtching
Dimensions36 1/2 x 26 in. (92.7 x 66 cm)
Framed: 36-1/2 x 26-3/16 x 3/4 in. (92.7 x 66.5 x 2.2 cm)
Credit LineGift of Dr. Kate Kohn
Object number1977.92
Object TypePrints
On View
Not on view
Robert Browning (1812–1889) was, along with Tennyson, the most celebrated English poet of the Victorian age; he is probably equally well known for his passionate marriage to Elizabeth Barrett, also a poet. They wed against Barrett’s father’s wishes in 1846 and eloped to Italy. This etching by Frank Brangwyn depicts the Palazzo Rezzonico (or Ca’ Rezzonico) on the Grand Canal in Venice, a grand house which belonged to the poet’s son Robert Barrett Browning, a painter. The elder Browning was staying there when he died on December 12, 1889, and a private funeral service was held in the palace. By the time Brangwyn made the etching, on the hundredth anniversary of the poet’s birth, the Ca’ Rezzonico had changed ownership; still, it continued to carry associations with Robert Browning and with visual artists such as John Singer Sargent, who had a studio there in the 1880s. Today it is a museum of eighteenth-century Venetian art.