A design for Earthly Paradise
This drawing was one of the designs that Burne-Jones made for
a vast project to illustrate William Morris's Earthly Paradise (six
volumes of which were eventually published between 1868 and 1870).
This daunting scheme, begun in 1865, was abandoned when Morris
could not find a typeface that would do justice to the illustrations.
Around fifty of the designs were cut as woodblocks by Morris, but
it was not until he took over all aspects of book production with
the Kelmscott Press that he was able to find satisfactory design
solutions for such ambitious work.
The deep, intense colour in this
work is typical of Burne-Jones' heavily-worked watercolours, to
which he added areas of thicker, more opaque bodycolour. The facial
types are similar to those of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, but
the soft-focus, generalised details are unique to Burne-Jones.
He produced at least five versions of this subject and later a
series of paintings telling the whole story of Cupid and Psyche
for the earl of Carlisle (now Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery).
Jealous
of Psyche's beauty, Venus sent Cupid to destroy her, but he fell
in love with the sleeping princess. Cupid, who could visit Psyche
only under the cover of darkness, represents love, and Psyche represents
the longing of the human soul.
Further Reading/Sources:
PD 1954-5-8-8 - Department of
Prints and Drawings, British Framed Basement PVII
J.A Gere, Pre-Raphaelite
drawings in the British Museum (London,
The British Museum Press, 1994), no. 58
S. Wildman and J. Christian, Edward
Burne-Jones, Victorian artist-dreamer (Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York, 1998), pp. 119-27
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