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The Pre-Raphaelites
and “The Lady of Shalott”
Note: For best results, play this presentation in conjunction with Loreena McKennitt’s “The Lady of Shalott” as audio accompaniment.
The Pre-Raphaelites were a radical group of Victorian painters founded
in 1848.
They challenged artistic conventions of form and composition.
Their paintings were highly symbolic and lush in detail, beauty, and color.
“Flaming June,” by Frederic Leighton
“Ophelia,” by John Everett Millais
Some subjects were religious; others secular.
The Pre-Raphaelites’ subjects were wide-
ranging.
Dante Gabriel Rossetti
“Beata Beatrix”
“The Scapegoat”William Holman Hunt, 1854
The medieval period was quite popular…
“Stitching the Standard”
Edmund Blair-Leighton
…as was Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s Arthurian poem “The Lady of
Shalott.”
The Pre-Raphaelites identified with the Lady as an artist:
She works her vision of the world into her art.
Trapped in a tower, the Lady is “cursed” to see the world only through an enchanted mirror.
“The Lady of Shalott”
By William Holman Hunt
And thus, as an artist, though she sees the world…
She is forever separate from it.
“The Lady of Shalott”John Sidney Meteyard, 1913
Though it reveals the world to her…
…the mirror is a screen between herself …
and reality.
“I Am Half-Sick of Shadows”
John William Waterhouse
One day, driven to look directly through her window, she sees a sight that changes
her forever:
Lancelot, the bravest of Arthur’s knights… and the
castle of Camelot behind him.
The Lady of Shalott Sees Lancelot
John William Waterhouse, 1894
“The Accolade”Edmund Blair-Leighton
The sight of Camelot brings the full force of the Lady’s curse
upon her.
The Lady is doomed from that moment.
The encounter with the real world……unmediated by her art or the mirror…
…will end her life.
Desperate and dying, she writes her name on the prow of a boat…
Her mirror cracks from side to side…
…and she feels the curse come upon her.
“The Lady of Shalott”By John William Waterhouse
…and floats to Camelot, the place that has always been
forbidden to her.
John Atkinson Grimshaw
“The Lady of Shalott,” 1878
…To those at Camelot, the Lady of Shalott is largely an
unreadable text.
They have no idea who she is.
By the time she arrives there, she is dead.
“The Lady of Shalott”
Arthur Hughes, 1873
…Lancelot, unaware he is a central cause of her death, can only reflect
that she has a lovely face…
…and pray that God in his mercy sends her grace.
“The Lady of Shalott”John Atkinson Grimshaw