â¦
Marillier, An Illustrated
Memorial, 198.
â¦
Shefer, âA Rossetti
Portraitâ, 2-15.
â¦
Surtees, A Catalogue
Raisonné, vol. 1, 153.
â¦
Marillier, An Illustrated
Memorial, 198.
â¦
Shefer, âA Rossetti
Portraitâ, 2-15.
â¦
Surtees, A Catalogue
Raisonné, vol. 1, 153.
This collection contains 4 texts and images, including:
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts chalk drawing
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
This picture, though related in more than its name to the Tate Gallery's Sancta Lilias, is yet a different work.
The picture's distinctive characteristic is its set of pictorial contradictions, which come through in the Virginia Museum of Fine Art version. These features are no part of the Tate Gallery's Sancta Lilias.
Production HistoryÂ
The date on the picture does not explain the circumstances that led DGR to undertake it in 1879. Returning at such a late date to the subject he had handled so elaborately in The Blessed Damozel and its many associated works seems odd unless he had a commission to do so. But no record of such a commission is recorded. In his Tabular List of DGR's pictures, WMR simply lists this work, which carries no further commentary.
ReceptionÂ
According to Marillier, this was âa very popularâ work. His remark is odd because the picture has no exhibition history at all, nor do we know very much about its contemporary production circumstances.
IconographicÂ
As in so many of DGR's pictures of ideal women, the figure here wears the âloose-fitting dress based upon fourteenth-century designâ (Shefer 10) that he had made a special feature of his work, beginning with The Girlhood of Mary Virgin. Shefer points out that âthis dress symbolized bohemianism and a free style of livingâ (Shefer 11).
PictorialÂ
The picture is closely related to The Blessed Damozelâindeed, it is a variant of the damozel, as the Tate Gallery's oil painting titled Sancta Lilias shows: the latter is a cut down state of a version of The Blessed Damozel. Marillier says the 1879 picture âmay have been intended for an Annunciation picture.â
LiteraryÂ
The picture is closely related to The Blessed Damozel by virtue of its pictorial connection to the painting The Blessed Damozel.