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Marillier, DGR: An Illustrated Memorial, 80
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WMR, DGR Designer and Writer, 43-44 (51-52)
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Sharp, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 154-155
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Surtees, A Catalogue Raisonné, vol. 1, 57.
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Yamaguchi, âThe Perfect Hero: Cruel Masculinity in D. G. Rossetti's The Death of Breuse sans Pitié (1996)
This collection contains 1 text or image, including:
Watercolour
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
One of the most astonishing of DGR's great watercolours of the 1850s, this picture is drawn from Malory's Morte d'Arthur, Book IX, âThe Book of Sir Tristram de Lyonesâ. It depicts the perfect knight Sir Dinadan fighting with Sir Breuse to rescue âthe wofullest lady in the worldâ, who came under his power after he had killed the lady's brother.
Production HistoryÂ
First executed in 1857 for William Morris, DGR kept the picture himself and returned to it early in 1864 because of George Rae's interest in DR's Arthurian watercolours. He reworked the picture in February and March, with some difficulty, and sold it to Rae at that point. A comment in his letter to Rae of 28 March is interesting: âSpecially glad too that Mrs. Rae likes the âBreuseâ which was the one for which you doubted her sympathies. I may say that I agree with you in thinking the âChapel of the Listsâ more successfully finished than the âBreuse,â though I did my best for the latter with much trouble, which is quite sufficient to account for its not hitting the mark at last quite so well as the other, which came right almost before I knew it. The fact is, I ought to have tried to finish the âBreuseâ with less work, as the brilliancy of such effects requires the least work possible. Perhaps some day when I see it again, I may see exactly what to do to it again to make it quite right, but my eye was tired when I sent it you, & it would have only endangered it to keep it longer in handâ (see Fredeman, Correspondence, 64. 41 ).
PictorialÂ
The drawing has much in common, technically, with DGR's other Arthurian watercolours, but thematically it stands in an even closer relation to A Fight for a Woman.