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Pia de' Tolomei (Rossetti painting)

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Year
  
c. 1868

Artist
  
Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Media
  
Oil paint

Medium
  
oil on canvas

Created
  
1868–1880

Support
  
Canvas

Pia de' Tolomei (Rossetti painting) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Dimensions
  
105.4 cm × 120.6 cm (41.5 in × 47.5 in)

Location
  
Spencer Museum of Art, Lawrence, Kansas

Period
  
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood

Similar
  
Dante Gabriel Rossetti artwork, Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood artwork, Oil paintings

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Pia de' Tolomei is an oil painting on canvas by English artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti, painted around 1868 and currently housed at the Spencer Museum of Art, on the campus of the University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas.

Contents

History

This work was painted at the start of Rossetti's affair with Jane Morris, who modelled for the picture. As he was to do with Beata Beatrix (1870), Rossetti chose a tale by Dante Aligheri (from Purgatorio) to illustrate his love for his model. The story tells of a woman whose husband imprisoned and later poisoned her: Rossetti wanted the world to believe the fantasy with which he was deluding himself - that William Morris kept Jane against her will. He continued this theme, as shown in Proserpine.

Rossetti not only drew Jane exhaustively, he also choreographed photographic sessions of her and used the photographs as preliminary sketches for drawings. Amongst other representations of her, Rossetti depicts Jane as Proserpine, Queen Guinevere and Desdemona - all of whom were at the mercy of men.

Jane appears disproportionately large in most of Rossetti's pictures. The background is immaterial as long as the viewer focuses on the beauty of her face. In Pia de' Tolomei her neck seems almost dislocated, it is so strangely elongated and the whiteness of her skin shines out, defying the viewer to pay attention to any other aspect of the painting. Strangely, Jane's hair colour is misrepresented here. Her natural colour was dark brown, yet Rossetti paints it with an auburn tinge - closer to Lizzie Siddal's hair colour than Jane's. Also, her hands are twisted and intertwined in a peculiar way.

  • Other depictions of Jane Morris
  • References

    Pia de' Tolomei (Rossetti painting) Wikipedia


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