
Sir John Everett Millais (1829-1896) English Artist
From Here
Millais spent three months painting "The Black Brunswicker." Studies for the work exist both in the Lady Lever Art Gallery’s archives as well as in Tate Britain.
Millais used Charles Dickens’s daughter Kate as the model for the girl and a private in the Life Guards for the soldier. Each had to model separately for this passionate scene because of the strict Victorian morals of the time.
Millais wished to be historically accurate in making the girl’s dress look quite antique. (It is actually a compromise between the fashions of 1859 and 1815 when waists were still kept high). The intensity of emotions is well conveyed in the close encounter of the couple, the girl’s body attempting to obstruct the soldier from his task and prevent his destiny.
The dark and enclosed space enhances the tragedy of the scene. The work appeals both to spectators’ patriotism and sentimentality. The only distraction is perhaps the brilliant shine of the girl’s dress, its creases tempting spectators’ tactile senses. The dog at the soldier’s feet also draws attention to the humanity of the subject.
On the wall of the room an engraving of a painting by J.L. David (1748-1825), depicting Napoleon crossing the Alps serves as a reminder of Waterloo while also alluding to current events in 1860, when Napoleon III entered upon a war in Northern Italy in an attempt to expel the Austrians.
5 comments:
This is beautiful. It says a lot in a very gentle manner. There is nothing gentle about war, yet the painting is gentle.
It is very striking. Hard to image they posed at different times because their bodies seem so aware of each other.
I can't decide if he is trying to leave and she is stopping him.
Or she is trying to escape the room, but he won't let her.
The way his thigh kinda traps her is so intimate.
Her right arm puzzles me. It is so - definitely not - a part of the warm, intimacy of the moment. It's a contradiction to the rest of the picture. Yes - the posing at different times - hardly seems to be a bother, does it.
Ok - leaving or staying? I get the arm - I completely missed his hand holding the door. I'm short - I miss the top of a lot of things. The dog begging with it's little red ribbon makes me laugh. But the dog seems to be begging her, not him.
Hmmmm. Always a puzzle. Never complete. I guess you have to be there on the day - and inside the artist's head.
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