John Ruskin (Millais) Explained

John Ruskin
Artist:Sir John Everett Millais
Year:1853–1854
Medium:Oil on canvas
Height Metric:78.7
Width Metric:68
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in
City:Oxford
Museum:Ashmolean Museum

John Ruskin is a portrait of the leading Victorian art critic John Ruskin (1819–1900).[1] [2] [3] It was painted by the Pre-Raphaelite artist John Everett Millais (1829–1896) during 1853–54. John Ruskin was an early advocate of the Pre-Raphaelite group of artists and part of their success was due to his efforts.

The painting depicts Ruskin in front of a waterfall in Glenfinlas, Scotland. Ruskin and Millais spent the summer of 1853 together at Glenfinlas in the Trossachs.[4] Ruskin was especially interested in the rock formations and undertook his own studies of these.

Creation

The painting of Ruskin was started at Glenfinlas, during which the details of the landscape were painted. The last stages of work on the painting were undertaken in Millais' studio in London. By that time Ruskin's wife Effie had fallen in love with Millais. She left Ruskin and sued him for an annulment of the marriage. She and Millais were married the following year.Millais found it very difficult to be in the same room as Ruskin when he was completing the work in London, calling it "the most hateful task I have ever had to perform".[5] As soon as the portrait was finished he broke off contact with Ruskin. Ruskin himself temporarily moved the portrait so that his father would not see it, since he was concerned that he would damage or destroy it.

Provenance

The painting was given by Ruskin to his friend Henry Wentworth Acland in 1871. It was left to his daughter, the photographer Sarah Angelina Acland, who kept it above her desk at the Acland family home in Broad Street, central Oxford[6] [7] and later at her own home in Park Town, North Oxford, where she photographed it in colour.[8] [9] It was then passed down through the family until it was sold at Christie's in 1965. The purchaser retained the painting until they died in 2012. It was accepted by the British Government in lieu of inheritance tax in 2013 and permanently allocated to the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, to which it had been on loan since 2012 and where it has been on display since 2013.[5] The painting has been exhibited several times, including exhibitions on the Pre-Raphaelites at Tate Britain London, during 1984 and 2004.[10] The painting was included in an exhibition on Colour Revolution in Victorian times at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford during 2023–4, together with the first colour photograph of the portrait taken by the pioneer colour photographer in her North Oxford home in Park Town, held in the History of Science Museum, Oxford.[11] [12]

The painting was valued by the Director of Finance at Oxford University at £7.0 million in 2012–3.[13] The painting featured in the 2014 film Effie Gray.[14]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Greer . Gehler . Millais's Portrait of John Ruskin . .
  2. Web site: Sir John Everett Millais. John Ruskin. 1854. Oil on canvas. Private collection . abcgallery.com . Olga's Gallery .
  3. Web site: Rebecca Jeffrey . Easby . Sir John Everett Millais, Portrait of John Ruskin . . 9 August 2015 . 19 November 2023 .
  4. Ruskin and Millais at Glenfinlas . . 138 . 1117 . 228–234 . April 1996 . . UK . 886970 .
  5. Web site: Oxford's Ashmolean museum acquires Millais John Ruskin portrait . . . UK . 20 May 2013 .
  6. Book: Hudson, Giles . Sarah Angelina Acland: First Lady of Colour Photography . . Oxford . 2012 . 978-1-85124-372-3 . 180–181 .
  7. Web site: Millais's Portrait of Ruskin, Sarah Angelina Acland, and Photography . Giles . Hudson . britishphotohistory.ning.com . 20 May 2013 . 19 November 2023 .
  8. Web site: Colour Photograph (Autochrome) of the Millais Portrait of John Ruskin Hanging in her House at Park Town, Oxford, by Sarah Angelina Acland, Early 20th Century . . UK . 3 May 2022 .
  9. Web site: Pre-Raphaelite Photography: Sarah Angelina Acland and Millais’s Portrait of Ruskin at Glenfinlas . Giles . Hudson . Matters Photographical . 20 May 2013 . 19 November 2023 .
  10. Web site: Pre-Raphaelite Vision: Truth to Nature . . London, UK . 2004 . (12 February – 3 May 2004)
  11. Web site: The Colourful Creatives: How Victorian Women Shaped Colour Technologies . Madeline . Hewitson . . UK . 2023 . 19 November 2023 .
  12. Jonathan P. . Bowen . Jonathan Bowen . Ruskin, Millais, and the Aclands: The colourful story of a painting, from oils to pixels . EVA London 2024: Electronic Visualisation and the Arts . . eWiC . 122–129 . 10.14236/ewic/EVA2024.21 .
  13. Web site: Financial Statements 2012/13 Commentary . Giles . Kerr . 2013 . . UK . 2014-09-12 . 2014-02-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140218082630/http://www.admin.ox.ac.uk/media/global/wwwadminoxacuk/localsites/finance/documents/financehome/2012-13_Giles%27_commentary_on_Financial_Statements.pdf . dead .
  14. John Ruskin and Effie Gray – portrait of a marriage . Cassone: The International Online Magazine of Art and Art Books . Jenny . Kingsley . December 2014 . 26 June 2024 .