Dr. John Archer Library Award 2019
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/10294/8314
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Item Open Access Archer Library Award 2019 - Reflective Essay(University of Regina Library, 2019-01) Leeper, JessicaFrom September 2018 to November 2018, I made significant use of the University of Regina’s Library resources and services to help me complete research for a scholarly edition in Dr. Susan Johnston’s English 349: Methods in Literary History. I researched a Pre-Raphaelite painting titled Isabella and the Pot of Basil composed in 1866-7 by William Holman Hunt. My goal for choosing Hunt’s painting was to represent a possible trajectory, or timeline, of adaptation.Item Open Access Archer Library Award 2019 Brochure(University of Regina Library, 2018-04) University of Regina LibraryItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2019 Photograph 1(University of Regina Library, 2019-05-10) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2019 Photograph 2(University of Regina Library, 2019-05-10) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2019 Photograph 3(University of Regina Library, 2019-05-10) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2019 Photograph 4(University of Regina Library, 2019-05-10) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2019 Poster (University of Regina Library, 2018-05) University of Regina LibraryItem Open Access Isabella and the Pot of Basil(University of Regina Library, 2018-11-13) Leeper, JessicaWilliam Holman Hunt conceived the idea to collaborate with John Everett Millais in composing designs from John Keats' Isabella; or, the Pot of Basil before the 1848 initiation of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (P.R.B.). In his memoir, Pre-Raphaelitism and the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, Hunt recounts a conversation in Millais' studio where the idea of finding a subject to study from Isabella first springs into his mind: "My first attempt to communicate to Millais my enthusiasm for Keats was for the moment a ludicrous failure. Going, to his studio, I took the volume of Isabella from my pocket, and asking him to sit down and listen, read some favorite stanzas.