Frederic, Lord Leighton, P.R.A. (1830-1896)
Frederic, Lord Leighton, P.R.A. (1830-1896)

A sheet of studies for 'Romola': Monna Brigida's conversion

Details
Frederic, Lord Leighton, P.R.A. (1830-1896)
A sheet of studies for 'Romola': Monna Brigida's conversion
black and white chalk on grey blue paper
11 ¼ x 17 ¼ in. (28.6 x 43.8 cm.)
Provenance
Bought in the early 1980s by the present owner.

Brought to you by

Clare Keiller
Clare Keiller

Lot Essay

The present drawing is part of a series of 25 drawings and fourteen decorated initials Leighton executed for George Eliot’s Romola: a historical romance set in Renaissance Florence and serialised in the Cornhill Magazine 1862-3. Initially Eliot disapproved of Leighton’s designs and relations between the two were strained. However they were eventually reconciled, and Leighton’s drawings were acknowledged to have contributed to the edition’s commercial success and the surge in popularity of illustration.

In the 1860s there was a vast increase in the number of books and periodicals published with black and white line plates. Both young artists and more seasoned professionals provided designs for the wood block engravers. Artists such as George John Pinwell (1842-1875) and Frederick Walker (1840-1875) produced watercolours and engravings for the Dalziel Brothers. Leighton’s first commissions as an illustrator came from the Cornhill Magazine; his drawings of The Great God Pan and Ariadne appeared as plates accompanying Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s poems 'A Musical Instrument’ and 'Ariadne at Naxos’ in 1860. Both Leighton and Poynter worked for the Dalziel Brothers and executed designs for Dalziel’s Illustrated Bible during the 1860s.

For other drawings by Leighton for Romola please see Christie's, London, Stunners: Pre-Raphaelite Art from a Private American Collection, 16 June 2015, lots 21-22.

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