Lot Essay
The subject of Rosalind and Celia from Shakespeare's As You Like It was to preoccupy O'Neil during 1856. A single figure of Celia, measuring 20½ x 16 in. was exhibited at the British Institution of that year, no. 352, and was sold at Christie's London, 28 November 2000, lot 1 (£9,987).
Shakespeare's play tells the story of the cousins Rosalind and Celia, the former the daughter of the Duke, the latter the daughter of his brother Frederick who ousts him. Rosalind falls in love with Orlando, whose father Sir Rowland de Boys was a friend of the exiled Duke. On hearing this Frederick banishes them, and they take refuge in the forest of Arden, Rosalind disguised as the countryman Ganymede (as seen here) and Celia as his sister Aliena, a shepherdess. The story, which involves many incidental characters such as the jester Touchstone, eventually resolves happily, with the wedding of Orlando and Rosalind, and Oliver his brother and Celia, and the restoration of the Duke to his Dukedom.
Such Shakespearean subjects were treated by many of the Pre-Raphaelites and their contemporaries, although it was a rare departure for O'Neil, who two years later was to exhibit his masterwork, Eastward Ho!, August 1857, a smaller version of which is to be offered in the sale of Important British Art, at Christie's London, on 28th November, lot 18.
Shakespeare's play tells the story of the cousins Rosalind and Celia, the former the daughter of the Duke, the latter the daughter of his brother Frederick who ousts him. Rosalind falls in love with Orlando, whose father Sir Rowland de Boys was a friend of the exiled Duke. On hearing this Frederick banishes them, and they take refuge in the forest of Arden, Rosalind disguised as the countryman Ganymede (as seen here) and Celia as his sister Aliena, a shepherdess. The story, which involves many incidental characters such as the jester Touchstone, eventually resolves happily, with the wedding of Orlando and Rosalind, and Oliver his brother and Celia, and the restoration of the Duke to his Dukedom.
Such Shakespearean subjects were treated by many of the Pre-Raphaelites and their contemporaries, although it was a rare departure for O'Neil, who two years later was to exhibit his masterwork, Eastward Ho!, August 1857, a smaller version of which is to be offered in the sale of Important British Art, at Christie's London, on 28th November, lot 18.