[Redbook10:73][19910512:1718fu]{Modern Art [continued (27)]}[Extracts from source text with ms notes][12th May 1991]
19910512.1718
[continued]
‘In England, a young illustrator, Aubrey Beardsley, influenced initially by Sir Edward Burne-Jones, arrived at what he called his Japonesque style in 1892[ce]. His work, in the years that followed, was foremost in spreading a new spirit that was not only decorative but strangely wanton and sensuous (Figure 17).* It was akin to the decorative style known as Art Nouveau, or Jugendstil, which spread across Europe and to the Americas in the 1890s[ce].’
**
*[For illustration, see [Redbook10:74][19910512:1718fx]{Modern Art [continued (30)]}[Extracts from source text with ms notes][12th May 1991]↓]
** – ibid [Encyclopaedia Britannica 25:369]
[{Partially duplicated & continues in next ts journal entry but three, [Redbook10:74-75][19910512:1718fy]{Modern Art [continued (31)]}[Extracts from source text with ms notes][12th May 1991]]
[continued]
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