| |
Collection Details
T Eustace Smith by 1883; acquired by 1st
Lord Faringdon at an unspecified date.
Literature
H C Marillier, D G Rossetti, 1899, No. 224,
p. 156, n. i; V Surtees, Paintings and Drawings of D G Rossetti, 1971,
No. 224a, pl. 319.
Exhibition Details
BFAC, 1883, No. 78.
Related Pictures
A number of studies exist for the oil of
1871 commissioned by John Graham, the uncle of William Graham (see Surtees,
op cit), now in a private collection.
Background
Pandora, for whom Jane Morris was the model,
is holding the box from which a vapour emerges, transforming itself into
winged figures that encircle her. On the frame is inscribed the sonnet,
written by the artist for the composition, What of the end, Pandora
. Swinburne said of this sonnet that it was the most perfect
and most exalted of all those done by Rossetti for his pictures, as the
design itself was among the mightiest in its Godlike terror and
imperial trouble of beauty. The box was, of course, not opened by
Pandora in the story, but by her husband, Epimetheus. On the back of the
drawing are two labels: a printed one signed by the artist to the effect
that care should be taken in removing the drawing from its frame as it
was not set, and a second which reads: No. 78 Pandora. This
design has been several times replicated or drawn, but No. 78 is the original
(S.191). The origin of the latter is not clear, but presumably it dates
from the 1883 exhibition, in which the drawing was numbered 78.
<< Back
to Page 7
Copyright © The Trustees of the Faringdon
Collection 1999. All rights reserved.
|