Purchased with assistance from the National Art Collections Fund
and various subscribers 1921.
This picture
was exhibited with words from the Old Testament, often seen as
prefiguring Christ’s
Crucifixion: "And one shall say unto him, What are these wounds in
thine hands? Then shall he answer. Those with which I was wounded
in the house of my friends."
Millais based the setting
on a real carpenter’s shop in
Oxford Street. Symbols of the Crucifixion figure prominently: the
wood, the nails, the cut in Christ’s hand and the blood on
his foot. Millais was viciously attacked by the press for showing
the holy family as ‘ordinary’. Charles Dickens described
Christ as ‘a hideous, wry-necked, blubbering, red-haired
boy in a night-gown.’
(From the display caption February 2004)
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