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Como Millais, Hughes también pintó una Ophelia (Ofelia) e ilustró el poema de Keats, The Eve of St. Agnes (La víspera de Santa Inés). La versión de esta última la hizo Hughes en forma de tríptico secular, una técnica que repetiría para las escenas de As You Like (Como gustéis) de Shakespeare.
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'The Pained Heart', or 'Sigh No More, Ladies', or 'Juliet...
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Arthur Hughes (* 27. Januar 1832 in London; † 23. Dezember...
- 39 Obras de Arte
Ophelia Arthur Hughes • 1863. The Beautiful Lady Without...
- Arthur Hughes
Arthur Hughes . 生於: 一月 27 1832; London, United Kingdom ; 死於:...
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2 de abr. de 2015 · Arthur Hughes' Ophelia has long been my favourite Pre-Rafaelite painting. Although the Millais version is more dramatic and famous, I find the Hughes painting evokes genuine pathos with its subtle, refined, twilight atmosphere. Opheliaby Arthur Hughes is on permanent display at the Manchester Art Gallery.
Though not an original member of the Pre-Raphaelites, Arthur Hughes embraced their aims. Hughes shows Ophelia as a melancholy young woman with piercing blue eyes and flowing red hair. In her madness, she is gathering flowers to hang on the willow tree; she will soon slip into the stream and drown.
30 de ene. de 2018 · In contrast to Redgrave and Millais, Arthur Hughes depicts Ophelia as a young, waif-like figure. Instead of colorful flowers, this Ophelia’s garland resembles a crown of thorns, a biblical image of the martyrdom of an innocent. The appearance of Hughes’ Ophelia seems more like that of a child than a young adult.
Ophelia. Arthur Hughes 1832 - 1915. Summary. In a dark, swampy, woodland setting, Ophelia, with a sorrowful expression, is seated in the centre, on the base of a overhanging willow tree, next to a stream. She is a delicate, pale young girl with long fair hair, and is dressed in white drapery, with a crown of reeds and flowers on her head.
Ophelia is a very popular topic for artists. Shown above are various images of Ophelia, depicting the story in different ways. For example Arthur Hughes’s work of Ophelia exhibited at the same time as Millais’s at the Royal Academy, shows Ophelia before she slips into the river. J. W. Waterhouse produced three paintings of Ophelia.
Like Millais, Hughes also painted Ophelia which is housed at Toledo Museum of Art and illustrated Keats's poem The Eve of St. Agnes. Hughes's version of the latter is in the form of a secular triptych, a technique he repeated for scenes from Shakespeare's As You Like It.