mercredi 1 mai 2019

Rossetti and the religion of female beauty


Venus Verticordia (detail) 1868
Oil on canvas
Russell-Cotes Arts Gallery Museum
Bournemouth, UK
‘Most people admire (Rossetti’s paintings) very much (…) –but (they are) still more remarkable for gross sensuality of a revolting kind’[1] wrote William Holman Hunt (1827-1910), commenting on Rossetti’s change of style during the 1860s. This statement seems all the more surprising since Hunt is known as the former ‘Brother’ of Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882), who was also part of the Pre-Raphaelite movement. Nevertheless, Hunt’s criticism emphasises the peculiarity of Rossetti’s art and his overt eroticism. Rossetti’s late style is characterized by an obsession for portraits of female figures. Rossetti’s female representations celebrate two particular artistic types, from the ‘fair maidens’ to the ‘femmes fatales’.
The ‘fair maiden’ refers to the medieval ideal of courteous love, the maiden being a faithful lady endowed with magical powers. The knight must revere her and accomplish heroic deeds in order to become her sweetheart. In visual arts and in medieval poetry, ‘fair’ may allude to light complexion and hair.
A femme fatale, on the other hand, is an alluring, seductive woman ensnaring her lover thanks to the irresistible desire she is able to convey. She uses her physical attributes to entrap him. The great amount of fascination she exerted on 19th century artists made her a stock character in literature and art. Accordingly, Rossetti painted different ranges of fair maidens and femmes fatales by depicting well-known heroines, his favourites being Beatrice, Queen Guenevere and Greco-Roman goddesses. Still, he also drew his inspiration from contemporary life and his models, who were either his friends or lovers. We shall then try to identify if there is a specific Rossettian style as related to femininity, by stressing how the artist combines these types of ideal, sometimes within the same painting. 

Raphael, Madonna and Child, 1505
Oil on wood, 44 x 59,5 cm,
National Gallery of Art, Washington
The Victorian ideal of beauty relied on two dimensions: artistic and social norms. Artistic canons derived from what students from the Royal Academy of London were taught: the imitation of High Renaissance Old Masters. This type of emulation was particularly favoured by Sir Joshua Reynols (1723-1792), founder of the Royal Academy of the Arts. R.A. students learned to paint according to the laws of perspective, from the essays by Alberti and Italian theoricians, to balance their hierarchised compositions with chiaroscuro and elegance of line. This had an impact on their models’ depiction: they seemed idealised, despite the ‘reality’ of the sitters. Raphael’s Mother and Child, for instance, was the epitome of the masterpiece that R.A. students sought to copy: the Virgin has this particular remote gaze one finds in other High Renaissance paintings (see Michelangelo or Da Vinci’s representations of the same biblical character), and the typical inclined pose of the head. Hair is tied up, the shape of the face is perfectly oval, and her features are neatly balanced: the nose stands right in the middle of her face, and the mouth is located exactly half-way between the line of the nose end and the line of the chin.
Richard Regrave, The Governess, 1844
Oil on canvas, 71,1 x 91,5 cm
Victoria and Albert Museum
Rossetti and his fellow members of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood criticised this artistic tradition for they thought that the depictions of their contemporaries were stereotyped imitations of those ideals, depriving the models of their authenticity. The Victorian ideals of feminine beauty privileged petite women with tied up, brown hair, and lady-like, submissive attitudes. Such representations could be found in the drawings of popular magazines such as Punch, but it was also immortalised by contemporary genre artists. In The Governess, Richard Redgrave (1804-1888) emphasises the submission of the main character with her lowering gaze. She epitomises the perfect Victorian woman, with her black dress and her delicate looks.

Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Paolo and Francesca da Rimini, 1855
Watercolour on paper, 25,4 x 59,5 cm
Tate Britain

Rossetti’s women, on the other hand, differ from the Renaissance Madonnas or the Victorian ideal of meekness. They are characterised by flowing hair, large eyes and heavy eyelids, Greek-like noses and full lips. He enhances the fleshy parts of the models like the medieval poets focusing on one particular part of the woman’s body, creating blasons. In Bocca Baciata, the mouth is indeed the main interest of the painting, as is indicated in the title. Almost at the centre of the picture, it attracts the viewer on account of its glowing red colour, contrasting with the paleness of the face. Red hair is another distinctive feature of Rossetti’s style. In this picture, the painter represents Fanny Cornforth (1835-1906) – Rossetti’s housekeeper and mistress - who actually had blond hair.
John Everett Millais, Ophelia (detail)
1852, Tate Britain
It was Elizabeth Siddal (1829-1862), Rossetti’s wife, model and pupil, who made red hair popular in the bohemian artistic circles of the time[1]. From his early drawings of her to the representations of other, fleshier women, Rossetti's style evolved. In the triptych above, Lizzie’s features are delicate and sensuous yet childlike. This childlike aspect also appears in other pictures of the P.R.B, especially in Millais’ painting. Still, the striking red hair motif in Rossetti's early depictions of Lizzie and later representations of other "femmes fatales" with Lizzie’s hair reveal the blurring of the fair maiden ideal and the seductress within certain pictures. In Dante's Dream, Rossetti’s last oil on canvas, the painter had intially intended to depict Beatrice as Elizabeth Siddal. The lady is presented on her deathbed, her reclining attitude showing her in a position of weakness. Later on, when Rossetti decided to complete his painting, he modified Beatrice’s features to make her look more like Jane Morris, his main lover during the 1870s, after his wife had died.
Dante's Dream, 1871
Oil on canvas, 211 x 317
Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool

In Bocca Baciata, there still is that element of ethereality to be found in early paintings; the common feature of Rossetti’s portraits during the 1860s is the vacant stare of the models, who seem to avoid looking directly at the viewer. This trait pervades the pictures with an impression of melancholy, as if Rossetti created a poetic language that suited to the mood of the sitter: women are represented in a self-contained world, oblivious of any other exterior element. Lizzie’s depictions however possess a morbid dimension. The P.R.B and especially Rossetti re-adapt the traditional depiction of the red-head figure who was usually associated to traitors -such as Judas- and prostitutes - such as Mary Magdalene.
Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Bocca Baciata, 1859
Oil on panel, 32 x 27 cm
Boston Museum of Fine Arts
Rossetti’s pictures were deemed as provocative, since he endowed the beauty of unconventional heroines with nobleness and seduction. Firstly, he was careful to not to choose professional models so the pictures could look more spontaneous. Lizzie Siddal, Jane Morris, Fanny Cornforth and Alexa Wielding, apart from being acquainted to the artist, were all from lower-class background than his. If Elizabeth Siddal was remarkable thanks to her size, hair and eyes, Jane Morris was described as a quiet person with a ‘dark and pale’ face, and a ‘Ionian Greek’ mien[1].
Rossetti’s women appear as tall and massive on his portraits: the models almost fills the whole picture, leaving little space for the setting. At a time when feminist groups started to gather to claim the same rights as men, Rossetti’s representations of women might have constituted an echo to this ‘New Woman’ type, which embodied a threat to political and social life[1]. In many pictures, Rossetti’s sitters might be regarded as frightening creatures: in Monna Vanna, the cold stare of the protagonist and the glass heart around her neck show her as a merciless figure.
Monna Vanna, 1866
Oil on canvas, 88,9 x 86,4 cm
Tate Britain
The sensuality of the portraits is so conspicuous that it appeared as shocking to contemporary viewers. Rossetti enhanced the erogenous parts of the female body such as the mouth, shoulders, and hands[1].  William Holman Hunt was not the only one to be appalled by Rossetti’s women. In 1871 Scottish writer Robert Buchanan wrote an article about Rossetti, entitled The Fleshly School of Poetry: Mr D.G. Rossetti, condemning the artist for his ‘weary wasting, yet exquisite sensuality; nothing virile, nothing tender, nothing completely sane; a superfluity of extreme sensibility’.
By celebrating the beauty of women that Rossetti actually knew, his portraits subtly mingle reality and fantasy, creating complex ideals and myths around these fascinating figures. Rossetti worked with what he called ‘stunners’, that is, women who caught his attention and were able to fascinate him, seduce and frighten him at the same time. This type of female beauty was described as a ‘union of strange and puissant physical loveliness with depth and remoteness of gaze’[3]. Throughout Pre-Raphaelite literature, the stories of these stunners have been mythified: successively, how he met and drew them, and the complex nature of his relationships to them. This explains how art critics and biographers still are fascinated with Rossetti’s love affairs that he incorporated in his portraits, sometimes, the artist is even described as a saviour figure, rescuing these women from their low-life condition. Besides, let us not forget that, during the Victorian era, modelling was regarded as being a type of work situated only a little above prostitution. Women who embraced this career made quite a bold choice: they could expose themselves to the criticism of friends and contemporaries. This might explain why Rossetti was always careful not to paint his sitters in the nude tradition, except in Ligeia Siren and Venus Verticordia.
Found! 1853
Oil on canvas, 91,4 x 78,7 cm
Delaware Art Museum
Innovating with a highly personal style enabled Rossetti to re-interpret the traditional genres of religious and history painting. He then mixes various genres by combining portraits with literary or modern-life inspirations. For instance, his depictions of the fallen woman can be regarded as representations of the Modern Eve. Such is the case with Found!, displaying Fanny Cornforth in the role of the prostitute. Just as in Rossetti’s poem of the same name, she is recognized by her former lover and shrinks out of shame before him. The pose is unconventional for it is very awkward: her body is twisted from the neck to the knees, and the line of the body contrasts the line of the arms, directed towards the male protagonist. The impression of uneasiness is reinforced by her expression, with her closed eyes and half-open mouth, almost shown in profile.
Fanny Cornforth seemed to be the perfect figure to embody the modern-life prostitute, while Elizabeth Siddal was cast as the medieval queen and Jane Morris as the evil temptress. Alexa Wielding, on the other hand, was often chosen to represent the courtesan or the enigmatic sorceress. As a contrast to Fanny Cornforth, Alexa Wielding, whom Rossetti noticed while walking in the Strand in 1865, was chosen to embody more ethereal figures, on account of her refined face. When Rossetti painted Lady Lillith, Fanny initially sat for the picture, but the artist substituted her features for those of Alexa, since the owner of the painting, Frederick Leyland, considered the original too earthly[1]

Proserpine, 1874
Oil on canvas
61 x 125, 1 cm
Tate Britain
As a result, Rossetti cast his friends and lovers as heroines suiting their personalities. The fleshiness and sensuality of the characters, overwhelmed by a dreamy quality, thus pervades Rossetti’s pictures. For the artist, physical and spiritual types of love were intertwined. This dimension is particularly relevant in the depictions of Jane Morris, which become increasingly physical over the 1870s. In Proserpine, the Greek line of the nose, the lips and the shape of the eyes are clearly delineated, yet Jane Morris embodied an unattainable Goddess who is doomed to live in the Underworld. The dark undertones is heightened through the cold hues of the painting, which are present through the mass of brown hair and the blue-green dress. Significantly, Rossetti returned to oils in the 1860s, after painting exclusively in watercolour or gouache during the 1850s. Oils enabled him to insist on the physicality of his models. The body of Jane Morris was so massive that it even appeared as masculine, especially in the representation of her shoulders and neck. Rossetti could thus re-adapt the androgynous canon of Greek statues. 
Elizabeth Siddal, on the other hand, was portrayed as more delicate and ethereal – her first representations are made through drawing and watercolour, two mediums highlighting the dreamlike dimensions of the pictures  - even if Rossetti tried to represent his wife as a noble queen. In the early 1850s, her individuality was already blurred by Rossetti’s fantasy of her as Beatrice, Dante’s lover; while Rossetti fantasised himself as the Italian poet. Lizzie’s portrait as Beatrice after her death in 1862 presents the culmination of this blurring between reality and fantasy. In Beata Beatrix, Rossetti portrays her in the traditional position of religious ecstasy (one can think of Bernini’s Saint Theresa) to immortalise her through his art. The physicality of Lizzie’s body slips away as the central protagonist is painted through a sort of haze that sets the surreal aspect of the scene into relief. Accordingly, Lizzie’s eyes are closed, transelike, while her clothes and hands are over-shadowed. The artist threw Lizzie’s face into relief by painting a golden halo around it and through a game of contrasting hues: on the whole, the character’s face attracts the viewer’s attention, for Rossetti used a lighter tone than for the rest of the painting, yet, once more, he enhances the erotic parts of her body; the shadows under the neck and near the eyelids are made more apparent, just as the dark tones of the lips. The overall effect of grace also comes from the distinctive lighter draperies standing against the darkness of the dress.
Gustave Moreau,
Tattoed Salomé (detail)

1876, oil on canvas
Gustave Moreau Museum
Grace and form are part of what is considered as the ‘moods’ of Rossetti’s female portraits. The recurrent, decorative patterns of Rossetti’s late style are distinctive features of the Aesthetic style. Aestheticism in the UK paralleled the emergence of the Symbolist movement in Europe, and it aimed at representing ‘art for art’s sake’. The choice to depict women as connected to the senses was favoured by fin-de-siècle artists, to present art as a pure sensual form[1]. Symbolists such as Fernand Khnopff (1858-1921) and Gustave Moreau (1826-1898) obsessively portrayed Femmes fatales especially when they embodied the stereotype of the fascinating Oriental character. In Moreau’s numerous versions of Salomé, the eponymous character is eroticised through her jewels, which point at the naked parts of her body.
The Beloved, 1865 - 1866
Oil on canvas, 82,5 x 76,2 cm
Tate Britain

Similarly, The Beloved presents an Oriental-like composition, in which space is built through the presence of several women, forming a whole decorative pattern. Besides, this painting is noticeable for the focus on jewels and flowers, elements that appear in many Rossettian paintings of the 1860s and 1870s. The design of women’s features, jewels and flowers produce an overall dreamy atmosphere, but the picture’s appealing to the senses is made through colour and the presence of musical instruments, which are characteristic of Aesthetic canvasses. The connection between colour and music is particularly striking in what can be considered as Rossetti’s ‘symphonies of colours’. In The Daydream, the symphony in blues and greens is created thanks to the various shades of green in the background and on the dress of Jane Morris. With the careful rendering of the draperies echoing the limbs’ movements and Jane’s eye colour, Rossetti explores diverse tones of blue, to produce a whole effect of harmony responding to the green tones of the leaves. This effect is even more poignant in La Ghirlandata. The dark greens are subtly rendered to throw the warm colours of Alexa Wilding’s hair and mouth into relief. The key of the painting lies in the contrast between the dark tones of greens and the warm oranges, yellows and reds. The artist, by catching women plunged into rêverie, meant to appeal to the viewer’s senses: sight, sound and touch.

La Ghirlandata, 1873
Oil on canvas, 124 x 85 cm
Guildhall Gallery, London
The Daydream, 1880
Oil on canvas, 158,7 x 92,7 cm
Victoria and Albert Museum
                           
                                                  
The complexity of Rossetti’s representation of female beauty lies in the multiple influences he draws from contemporary life and literature on the one hand, and in the tension between the physicality and the dreamlike quality of the portraits on the other hand. By intertwining real life and artistic issues, physical and artistic love and by depicting sensuous women, Rossetti is able to create a type of art that overcomes moral categories. Rossetti’s portraits are aimed at catching woman in an ethereal moment, thus creating a true religion of beauty. However, what may seem surprising is that this highly personal vision of the female body, that was controversial when Rossetti was still active, became quite influential to the development of the Aesthetic Movement, partly because of Rossetti’s distinctive personality and way of painting. Indeed, he was revered by Edward Burne-Jones (1833-1898), and his female type influenced Burne-Jones’ work even after he died. Since Rossetti paints subjective portraits of friends or lovers cast as literary or mythical heroines, remarkable through their distinctive features, it may be fair to talk about a Rossettian artistic type, which flouted the canons of Victorian female beauty.




[1] In Nicoll, John. Dante Gabriel Rossetti, London: Studio Vista, Cassell and Collier Macmillan, 1975, p.125
[1] See Lucinda Hawksley, ‘The Red-Hair Model’ in Lizzie Siddal: The Tragedy of a Pre-Raphaelite Supermodel, London: Andre-Deutsch, ch.1
[1] See William Michael Rossetti about Jane Morris in Dante Gabriel Rossetti, His Family Letters with a Memoir, 1885, I, p.199: ‘Her face was at once tragic, mystic, passionate, calm, beautiful and gracious-a face for a sculptor and a face for a painter-a face not at all like that of an Englishwoman, rather of an Ionian Greek. It was not a face for that large class of English people who only take to the ‘perfect’ and not to the beautiful and the superb. Her complexion was dark and pale, her eyes a deep penetrating grey, her massive wealth of hair gorgeously rappled (…)’.
[1] ‘Instead of primarily focusing on the face and the head, Rossetti often included more of the torso (…) sensualizing to a hitherto unheard-of degree the erogenous parts of the body’. Susan P. Casteras, Pre-Raphaelites Challenges to Victorian Canons of Beauty, The Huntington Library Quaterly, vol.55, n°1, p.29
[3] F.W.H. Myers, ‘Rossetti and the Religion of Beauty’, Cornhill Magazine, February 1883, p.220
[1] Jennifer Lee, ‘The Forgotten Muse: Alexa Wilding’, The Pre-Raphaelite Society Newsletter of the United States, Number 19, Spring 2008
[1] For the connection between Rossetti and the Aesthetic movement, see Tim Barringer, ‘Pre-Raphaelites and Aesthetes’ ch.5, in Reading the Pre-Raphaelites, pp.135-155