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Keywords

The Art of Deniability
Ahasuerus consulting the records
Maarten van Heemskerck
Philip Galle
cultural criticism
Christ in the House of His Parents
John Everett Millais
teaching literature
teaching arts
hidden images
Victorian era
Margaret Aston
Edward VI and the Pope
paranoiac-critical method
juvenile books
Nachbild
Bildzitat/Nachbild als künstlerische Strategien
beautiful-grotesque
cryptomorph
Sources for Sir John Everett Millais' 'Christ in t
deniability
Provenienzforschung
Ahasverus
pictorial allusions
image comparison
Henry Holiday
The Hunting of the Snark
Bildzitat
Pre-Raphaelites
allusions
Lewis Carroll
pictorial
hidden pictures
comparison
favorites
conundrum
John the Baptist
Bildervergleich
Cryptomorphism
interpictorial
pictorial citation
pictorial quote
visual semiotics
visuelle Semiotik
Kunstwissenschaft
English literature
arts research
Snark after May 2013
Edward VI
Allusionsforschung
allusion research
crossover
crossover books


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Photo replaced on 02 Nov 2014
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Holiday - Millais - Anonymous - Galle; detail

Holiday - Millais - Anonymous - Galle; detail
#1, left - (allusion to the bedpost #3): 1876, Henry Holiday (engraver: Joseph Swain): The illustration detail on the very left side is a vectorized scan from Holiday's illustration to an 1910 edition of Lewis Carroll's The Hunting of the Snark.
#1, right: Additionally you see a segment from Holiday's preperatory draft.
UncleDraftRedrawn

#2 - (allusion to the bedpost #3 and to Philip Galle's print #4): 1850, the young John the Baptist in John Everett Millais: Christ in the House of His Parents (aka The Carpenter's Shop). The left leg of the boy looks a bit deformed. This is no mistake. Probably Millais referred to #3 and to #4.

#3 - (Henry VIII's bedpost): 16th century, anonymous: Redrawn segment of Edward VI and the Pope, An Allegory of Reformation, (mirror view).

#4 - (bedpost #3 alludes to bedpost #4): 1564, Redrawn segment of a print Ahasuerus consulting the records by Philip Galle after Maarten van Heemskerck. The resemblance of #4 to the image #3 (the bedpost) was shown by the late 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.


Holiday - Millais - Anonymous - Galle (for analysis)

Steve Bucknell, have particularly liked this photo


Comments
 Götz Kluge
Götz Kluge club
Earlier version without the detail from Henry Holiday's preperatory draft:
Holiday - Millais- Anonymous - Galle, detail
10 years ago. Edited 10 years ago.
 Götz Kluge
Götz Kluge club
Uncle's Blanket

Segment (like #1 above) from an illustration by Henry Holiday (engraver: Joseph Swain) to Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark". Publisher: MACMILLAN AND CO.

left: 1876
R. CLAY, SONS, AND TAYLOR, PRINTERS
Signature: SWAIN S.C.
(scaled down to the size of the miniature edition)

right: 1910, 2nd Miniature Edition
R. CLAY AND SONS, LIMITED
Signature: SWAIN S.C.

There seem to be no significant differences.
10 years ago. Edited 10 years ago.
 Götz Kluge
Götz Kluge club
The description "a daisy-chain pattern of borrowings by an illustrator from another" also applies to the image on top of this page. Here Henry Holiday is at the "youngest" end of the chain. I found that nice description in annother context on page 53 in Maria Nikolajeva's Aspects and Issues in the History of Children's Literature, 1995.
9 years ago. Edited 9 years ago.