Water Willow (Rossetti)

Water Willow
Artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti
Year 1871
Type oil on canvas
Dimensions 33 cm × 26.7 cm (13 in × 10.5 in)
Location Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, Delaware

Water Willow is an 1871 oil painting by Dante Gabriel Rossetti. It depicts Jane Morris in the river landscape near Kelmscott Manor, with the manor in the left background and Kelmscott Church below the hill to the right.[1]

Origins

Chalk study for Water Willow. Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery.

In May 1871, William Morris rented Kelmscott Manor, a 17th-century limestone manor house along the Thames near Kelmscott in Oxfordshire, to be a summer escape from London. Rossetti shared the lease, but the house soon became a retreat for Rossetti and Morris's wife Jane to have a long-lasting and complicated liaison. The two spent an idyllic summer there, with the Morris children, in 1871, while Morris himself travelled to Iceland.[1][2] Rossetti made a version of Water Willow in coloured chalks at Kelmscott, and then painted the small oil "to fit a beautiful old frame I have"[3] In the chalk study, Jane holds a pansy, symbol of love and remembrance, rather than the willow branches, a symbol of sorrow and longing, of the final painting.[1]

In 1877, facing financial difficulties, Rossetti sold the painting to "a new buyer", William Alfred Turner (1839–1886), a Manchester cotton spinner, who also purchased Proserpine at that time.[1][4] Rossetti apologized to Jane Morris for selling the work, saying he was "really mortally sorry to part with the Kelmscott picture" but "felt there was no alternative".[1]

Provenance and exhibitions

After Turner's death, the painting was sold at auction by Christie's on 28 April 1888 and was bought in by his executors. Water Willow was the first Pre-Raphaelite painting acquired by the American collector Samuel Bancroft, who purchased it in 1890. Bancroft later sent the painting back to England to be repaired by Charles Fairfax Murray. Murray asked and received Bancroft's permission to make a copy that he gave to Jane Morris, because "she was to have had the picture, it being a great favourite of hers."[5] The original was bequeathed to the Delaware Art Museum by Bancroft's descendants in 1935.[1]

The painting was exhibited in Manchester in 1882 and again in 1887, London in 1883, and Philadelphia in 1892. It was also exhibited in Wilmington, Delaware in 1917 and 1934, New Haven, Connecticut in 1976, and Liverpool and Amsterdam in 2003.[1]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Wildman (2004), p. 192
  2. Todd (2001), pp. 123–130
  3. Treuherz (2003), p. 201
  4. Wildman (2004), p. 32
  5. Quoted in Wildman, p.192

References

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