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From
Culture Trip:
In 1894, the Tate Gallery received into its collection an oil-on-canvas
painted by a founding member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (PRB),
John Everett Millais. Titled Ophelia, it depicted the aftermath of the Shakespearean heroine’s suicide in Hamlet. A
morbid scene but a popular one at the time, under Millais’ brush this
painting contained no violence – only an ethereally harrowing tone.
Although Ophelia was an early Pre-Raphaelite work – a work
opposing the lauded Renaissance artist Raphael and his influential
elegance – it exemplifies much of what the PRB initially stood for: high
detail, close attention to nature, abundant colour, and non-simplistic
composition, with subjects frequently stemming from the Romantic, the
medieval, and the literary. Shakespeare was highly popular in the
Victorian age, and the dramatic death of Ophelia, who purposefully let
herself drown following her father’s murder at the hands of her lover
Hamlet, frequently appeared as the subject of many pieces of art at this
time. The PRB did not shy from scenes which were emotionally or morally
challenging, with death frequently entering their subject choices. In
the Tate collection alone, Ophelia is joined in Pre-Raphaelite scenes of death by Henry Wallis’ The Death of Chatterton, and, sailing to her death, John William Waterhouse’s The Lady of Shalott. (Read more.)
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