1 favorite     3 comments    3 515 visits

See also...

Flickr Refugees Flickr Refugees


Vintage Illustration Vintage Illustration


New Flickr Survivors New Flickr Survivors


Art is Art Art is Art


books books


diptych diptych


See more...

Keywords

Ahasuerus
pictorial citation
interpictorial
Cryptomorphism
Bildervergleich
image comparison
pictorial allusions
Victorian era
hidden images
religious iconography
teaching arts
teaching literature
John Everett Millais
cultural criticism
Philip Galle
beautiful-grotesque
Bildzitat/Nachbild als künstlerische Strategien
Nachbild
pictorial quote
visual semiotics
visuelle Semiotik
favorites
comparison
hidden pictures
pictorial
Lewis Carroll
Wimmelbild
allusions
Pre-Raphaelites
Bildzitat
The Hunting of the Snark
Kunstwissenschaft
English literature
arts research
Joseph Swain
iconoclasm
conundrum
Henry Holiday
Christ in the House of His Parents
juvenile books
Edward VI
Allusionsforschung
allusion research
crossover
crossover books


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

3 515 visits


Holiday - Millais - Anonymous - Galle

Holiday - Millais - Anonymous - Galle
See also: www.academia.edu/9856486/Henry_Holiday_-_and_Millais_Christ_in_the_House_of_His_Parents_

.

The discovery here is the allusion by Henry Holiday to the painting by J.E. Millais. Finding Millais' allusions to an anonymous painter and to Galle's print is a "bycatch" of my Snark hunt. The relation between the anonymous painting and Galle's print already has been explained by Margaret Aston in 1994. That relation brobably has been discovered even earlier by Millais.

.

[left]: Henry Holiday: Depiction (1876) of the Baker's visit to his uncle in Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark" (engraved by Joseph Swain). Outside of the window are some of the Baker's 42 boxes.

[right top]: John Everett Millais: Christ in the House of His Parents aka The Carpenter's Shop (1850).
Location: Tate Britain (N03584), London.
Literature:
* Deborah Mary Kerr (1986): John Everett Millais's Christ in the house of his parents (circle.ubc.ca/handle/2429/26546)
* p.34 in (01) Éva Péteri (2003): Victorian Approaches to Religion as Reflected in the Art of the Pre-Raphaelites, Budapest 2003, ISBN 978-9630580380 (shortlink: www.snrk.de/EvaPeteri.htm)
* Albert Boime (2008): Art in an Age of Civil Struggle, 1848-1871
p. 225-364: The Pre-Raphaelites and the 1848 Revolution (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:BookSources/0226063283)

[right middle]: Anonymous: Edward VI and the Pope, An Allegory of Reformation, mirrored view (16th century, NPG 4165). Iconoclasm depicted in the window. Under the "window" 3rd from left is Thomas Cranmer who wrote the 42 Articles in 1552.
Edward VI and the Pope (NPG 4165) was, until 1874, the property of Thomas Green, Esq., of Ipswich and Upper Wimpole Street, a collection 'Formed by himself and his Family during the last Century and early Part of the present Century' (Roy C. Strong: Tudor and Jacobean Portraits, 1969, p.345). Thus, when Millais' Christ in the House of His Parents ('The Carpenter's Shop') was painted in 1849-1850, the 16th century painting was part of a private collection. It was sold by Christie's 20 March 1874 (lot 9) to a buyer unknown to me, that is, when Holiday started with his illustrations to The Hunting of the Snark.
Location: National Portrait Gallery, London

[right bottom]: Philip Galle after Maarten van Heemskerck, Redrawn print Ahasuerus consulting the records (1564). The resemblance to the image above (right middle) was shown by Dr. Margaret Aston in 1994 in The King's Bedpost: Reformation and Iconography in a Tudor Group Portrait (p. 68). She also compared the bedpost to Heemskerck's Esther Crowned by Ahasuerus.
Location: Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

(deleted account) has particularly liked this photo


Comments
 Götz Kluge
Götz Kluge club
Album:

J. E. Millais


Holiday - Millais - Anonymous - Galle

42 Boxes, Sheep, Iconoclasm

Thomas Cranmer's 42 Boxes
Thomas Cranmer's 42 boxes

Wood Shavings turned Pope

Holiday - Millais - Anonymous - Galle; detail

Kerchiefs and other shapes
Kerchiefs and other shapes

Thumb & Lappet
Thumb and Lappet

The Carpenter and Ahasuerus
The Carpenter and Ahasuerus
11 years ago. Edited 10 years ago.
 Götz Kluge
Götz Kluge club
More (by Albert Boime) on sources to Millais' painting: www.albertboime.com/Articles/29.pdf
8 years ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.