The Lady of Shalott & John William Waterhouse

The Lady of Shalott

The Lady of Shalott
Artist John William Waterhouse
Year 1888
Type Oil on canvas
Dimensions 153 cm × 200 cm (60 in × 79 in)
Location Tate, London

The Lady of Shalott is an 1888 oil-on-canvas oil painting by the English Pre-Raphaelite painter John William Waterhouse. The work is a representation of a scene from Lord Alfred Tennyson’s 1832 poem of the same name, in which the poet describes the plight of a young woman (loosely based on Elaine of Astolat, who yearned with an unrequited love for the knight Sir Lancelot) isolated under an undisclosed curse in a tower near King Arthur’s Camelot. Waterhouse painted three different versions of this character, in 1888, 1894 and 1916.

According to legend, the Lady of Shalott was forbidden to look directly at reality or the outside world; instead she was doomed to view the world through a mirror, and weave what she saw into tapestry. Her despair was heightened when she saw loving couples entwined in the far distance, and she spent her days and nights aching for a return to normality. One day the Lady saw Sir Lancelot passing on his way in the reflection of the mirror, and dared to look out at Camelot, bringing about a curse. The lady escaped by boat during an autumn storm, inscribing ‘The Lady of Shalott’ on the prow. As she sailed towards Camelot and certain death, she sang a lament. Her frozen body was found shortly afterwards by the knights and ladies of Camelot, one of whom is Lancelot, who prayed to God to have mercy on her soul. The tapestry she wove during her imprisonment was found draped over the side of the boat.

Elaine of Astolat by Sophie Anderson.

Tennyson’s verse was popular with many of the Pre-Raphaelite poets and painters, and was illustrated by such artists as Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William Maw Egley, and William Holman Hunt. Throughout his career, Waterhouse was preoccupied with the poetry of both Tennyson and John Keats, and between 1886 and 1894 he painted three episodes from the former’s epic.

Although the oil painting is typically Pre-Raphaelite in composition and tone, its central framing, as well as the linear echoes between the leaves of the overhanging trees and the hair and creases of the lady’s dress and tapestry, betray formal and spatial elements borrowed from the earlier Neo-Classical style. It is typically Pre-Raphaelite in that it illustrates a vulnerable and doomed woman and is bathed in natural early-evening light. The lady is portrayed staring away from the crucifix, which sits beside three candles. During the late nineteenth century, candles were often used to symbolise life: In this image, two have blown out.

The Lady of Shalott was donated to the public by Sir Henry Tate in 1894.

John William Waterhouse

John William Waterhouse

John William Waterhouse, working on “Lamia”, circa 1908-09.
Born 6 April 1849(1849-04-06)
Rome, Italy
Died 10 February 1917 (aged 67)
London, England
Nationality British
Field Painter
Training Royal Academy
Movement Pre-Raphaelite
Works Hylas and the Nymphs
The Lady of Shalott
Ophelia
Influenced by Lawrence Alma-Tadema
Frederic Leighton

 

John William Waterhouse (6 April 1849 — 10 February 1917) was an English Pre-Raphaelite painter who is most famous for his oil paintings of female characters from Greek and Arthurian mythology.

Waterhouse was one of the final Pre-Raphaelite artists, being most productive in the latter decades of the 19th century and early decades of the 20th, long after the era of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. Because of this, he has been referred to as “the modern Pre-Raphaelite”, and incorporated techniques borrowed from the French Impressionists into his work.

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