A Victorian Obsession: The Pérez Simón collection, Leighton House Museum

Gripped by A Victorian Obsession? Leighton House hosts a treasure trove of 19th century artists of the Aesthetic Movement in Holland Park.

Lawrence Alma-Tadema - The Roses of Heliogabalus, 1888, Juan Antonio Pérez Simón Collection, Mexico © Studio Sébert Photographes
The ornate walls of Leighton House Museum, London are being adorned with 50 of the best examples of nineteenth-century British painting this November. The Pérez Simón collection, the largest of Victorian art in private hands outside the UK, will be distributed throughout the Aesthetic Movement house, with some pieces even returning to the original positions they held duringFrederic Leighton’s residency at the Leighton House Museum, Holland Park Road. The billionaire lender Juan Antonio Pérez Simón, Mexico raised and born in Spain, is frequently described as ‘quiet’ and ‘unassuming’: two adjectives completely at odds to the exuberance of his collection.

Highlights not to miss are Albert Moore’s The Quartet (1868), in which music is represented by visual intervals; the unfairly overlooked Henry Payne’s The Enchanted Sea (c. 1899) and, for notes of scandal, Frederic Leighton’s own Crenaia (1880) which depicts his companion Dorothy Dene. Leighton’s romantic life remains to this day a mystery, though Leighton House curatorDaniel Robbins has hinted that Dene provoked rivalry from Leighton’s other rumoured lover, the dashing Giovanni Costa. Other shining stars include Edward Burne-Jones; Dante Gabriel Rossetti, the dissolute Pre-Raphaelite and John Millais, their respectable counterpart who marriedJohn Ruskin’s ex-wife Effie. Finally, spend time with Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema’s terrifying The Roses of Heliogabalus (1888), where the guests of a Roman tyrant’s orgy are suffocated by thousands of pink petals.

Lord Leighton, who holds the record for the shortest-lived peerage in history after dying only one day after the accolade, presided over the late-nineteenth-century art for art’s sake world asPresident of the Royal Academy. Pay a visit to his magnificent home on Holland Park Road with its unique Leighton House Arab hall, and feast on the magnificence and paradox of a period often stereotyped as stuffy and repressed. This collection at Leighton House will change your mind forever.

Why not see Emma Thompson's original screenplay about the fascinating story of Euphemia 'Effie' Gray at Leighton's Studio in a special screening on Monday 8 December, 6.30pm. Click here to book tickets.
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