1819 John
Ruskin is born in
1836 Resides
in
1839 Wins
the Newdigate Prize for poetry at
1840
First meets Turner. Falls ill, possibly with consumption, and
leaves
1841 Writes
The King of the Golden River for Euphemia
Chalmers Gray, whom he marries in 1848.
1842 Takes
BA at
1843 Publishes
first volume of Modern Painters anonymously in May.
1844 Revises
Modern Painters I, deleting much of its polemics. Reads
A. F. Rio's
1846 Publishes
Modern Painters, Volume II, which marks a new departure
in his thought.
1847 Reviews
Lord Lindsay's Sketches of the History of Christian Art
in the June Quarterly Review. Unknown to Ruskin, Modern Painters II inspires William Holman Hunt, John Everett
Millais, and Dante Gabriel Rossetti to emulate Tintoretto's fusions of visual
realism and elaborate symbolism.[92/93]
1848 Marries
Euphemia Chalmers Gray, a distant cousin, on 10
April, after which he and his wife tour
1849 Publishes
The Seven Lamps of Architecture. Works
in
1850
Publishes collected Poems and The King of the Golden River, which is, however, dated the
following year.
1851 Publishes
the first volume of The Stones of Venice, "Notes
on the Construction of Sheepfolds", and Pre-Raphaelitism.
Defends Hunt and Millais in letters to The Times after Coventry
Patmore points out their work to him. Meets Millais,
Rossetti, Hunt, and other members of the Pre-Raphaelite circle. Works in
1853 The second
and third volumes of The Stones of Venice are
published. Travels with wife, Millais, and Millais's brother
in Scottish Highlands.
1854
Marriage annulled on grounds of non-consummation. (The following year Effie
marries Millais.) Begins lecturing on art at the newly founded Working Men's
College and becomes friendly with D. G. Rossetti and Elizabeth Siddall. Writes letters to The Times defending Pre-Raphaelite painting. Publishes
Lectures on Art and Architecture delivered in
1855
Begins Academy Notes, annual reviews of the
1856
Publishes the third and fourth volumes of Modern Painters,
which concern the rise of Romantic art and attitudes towards landscape. Meets
Charles Eliot Norton, his American friend, disciple, and popularizer.[93/94]
1857
Publishes The Elements of Drawing and The Political Economy of
Art. Lectures extensively and studies works in Turner bequest.
1858
Meets and falls in love with Rose
1860
Completes the final volume of Modern Painters and
publishes political and social criticism in the Cornhill
Magazine, but protests by readers prompt Thackeray, the editor, to limit
Ruskin to four articles later published as Unto This Last
(1862).
1862
Publishes "Essays on Political Economy" in Fraser's
Magazine (1862-3); these are published in book form as Munera Pulveris in 1872.
1864
Ruskin's father dies on 2 March and leaves him considerable wealth. Writes and
delivers "Traffic" and "Of King's Treasuries".
1865
Publishes Sesame and Lilies.
1866
Publishes The Crown of Wild Olive and The
Ethics of the Dust, this last work a series of dialogues with children
explaining geology based upon his occasional teaching at the
1867
Publishes Time and Tide, letters to a British labourer
about social and political issues. Becomes friendly with the
social worker Octavia Hill.
1869
Publishes The Queen of the Air, a study of Greek myth
which expands ideas found in the closing volumes of Modern
Painters. Appointed the first Slade Professor of Fine
Art at
1871
Purchases Brantwood near Coniston in the
1875
Rose dies, insane, at age twenty-seven.
1878
Founds the Guild of St. George. Suspends Fors
after an attack of madness in the spring and is unable to testify in Whistler v. Ruskin in November.
1879
Resigns Slade Professorship at
1880
Recovering from attacks of madness, he resumes Fors and begins "Fiction, Fair and Foul", a
series that appears intermittently in the Nineteenth Century
until October 1881. Publishes A Joy For Ever,
an expanded version of The Political Economy of Art
(1857).
1883
Resumes Professorship at
1884
Delivers "The Storm-Cloud of the Nineteenth Century" as a lecture at
the London Institution and begins to publish the
1885
Continues publication of The Pleasures of England and
publishes Praeterita, his
autobiography, which appeared intermittently in parts until July 1889. Mental
illness forces temporary cessation of writing.
1886
Suffers attacks of mental illness.
1900
Dies of influenza on 20 January and is buried in Coniston churchyard.[95/96]
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