Briar Rose Series. The Legend of Briar Rose is the title of a series of paintings by the Pre-Raphaelite artist Edward Burne-Jones which were completed between 1885 and 1890.
   The four original paintings-The Briar Wood, The Council Chamber, The Garden Court and The Rose Bower-and an additional ten adjoining panels, are located at Buscot Park in Oxfordshire, England. The four major panels were first exhibited at Agnew's Gallery in Bond Street, London in 1890.
   They were acquired by Alexander Henderson, later to become the Lord Faringdon, for Buscot Park. When Burne-Jones visited the house and saw the paintings in their new setting he decided to extend the frames of each of the four paintings and fill in the gaps with joining panels which continued the rose motif from the main paintings.
   The paintings do not tell a sequential story but record the same moment in each location. The painting depicts the discovery of the sleeping soldiers by a Knight.
   In their slumber they have become completed entwined by the barbed thorns of the Briar rose. Running beneath each of the major panels is an inscription of a poem by William Morris, under The Briar Wood the inscription reads: The fateful slumber floats and flows About the tangle of the rose; But lo! the fated hand and heart To rend the slumberous curse apart! The painting shows the scene in the Council chamber. The members of the council sleep, as does the Ki
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